I have spent a lot of time hunting, and I can't seem to find this anywhere.
I thought a lot about whether something with one or two letters changed would match, but even that didn't seem promising, although Amasis with a new 'a' and 'r' would be pretty close.
So it seems this must be a rather new font, or one from an obscure source. I am still hoping to see an answer for this, just to satisfy my curiosity about it.
You know, I haven't given up on this one yet. It's really bugging me. I found what I think is the closest yet: Placebo Serif by Thierry Puyfoulhoux of Presence Typo. The serifs are not quite right, but the basic shapes of letters are quite close. (IMHO)
Maybe our answer is going to be another font by this designer..
I was wondering if the numbers are from the same face?
E&F has a condensed version of a slab (Egyptienne) that looks like this but no regular. I wonder if maybe there was a regular designed that had to be nixed for some reason. The 5 sure has the curves.
It seems highly unlikely that someone would customize one or two characters of an existing font when there are SO many fonts that resemble this. I bet it's a custom corporate or magazine font, but that's why it would be good to know where it came from.
Patricia, the Egyptienne you've posted is from a different foundry. The five is no match. The E&F Egyptienne five does, to me, look very similar to the posted sample. However E&F doesn't seem to offer a version that is not condensed, which to me is odd.
Here is Boton Medium, and it's not a match. The serifs on the c and s, are just the most obvious problems.
Whatever this is, it's not from one of the major foundries, unless it's a custom face they did. It's the sort of thing Font Bureau might do, as a limited face for a special customer.
Ryan, can you show us a better (more complete & larger) sample of Apex Serif? The link you gave shows only a too small image for me, and not enough of the font.
Could it be Siemens slab? Unfortunately the bold is a crappy jpeg but the serifs match from what I can see. This quote has to do with business machines and M2M and all that stuff (did some google research since Jonas seems to have disappeared). Proprietary font would explain why nobody can find it.
Hehe. I attributed this quote to Lars Godell of Forrester Research (speaking about M2M) last week when trying to find where this sample was from. Now it seems you've found the same thing and a bit more as it seems you've found the original sample! Where is it from?
Nonetheless, I think you've got it. I think this is Siemens Slab Bold. Now pull back the curtain and tell us how you did it. Or maybe, like any Magician worth his salt, you should never reveal your secrets.
I hope this Jonas dude appreciates our combined effort. He seems to have fallen off the face of the earth! If he'd only replied to our MANY requests for the source of the sample this might have been cleared up days ago.
I think Wolfgang Grulke mentions "some 50 billion machines" while Lars Godell has that exact quote from the original sample. Both deal with M2M. Yeah, I wish Jonas would come back and shed some light on this but it seems this thread is now an orphan. Still, thanks to your efforts it's another one in the solved column and now we've all learned about Siemens Slab Bold, and perhaps will consider it in a future type-ID so it's all good.
Great work Patty! It pays to be up on your type award winners, although it should be rare for us ever to see this one again, since it is proprietary. So the implication of that is that the original sample was a quote of Godell/Grulke in a Siemens publication? (seems plausible)
Well, anyway, I filed that sample in with my Slab Serif fonts, so I will recognize it if there is a next time. I'm just glad I don't have to keep hunting for more slab serif samples
I remember that last thread clearly but whether we've seen the custom Siemens family before isn't in doubt. Like Mike said, a passing glance at the family almost a year ago was hardly enough to register all the destinctive shapes of the variant slab face, and since it was a corporate face, I never thought we'd see it again unless someone asked "what's the siemen's face?" at which point a bell would ring. BUt without any sort of indication that the source of this was a Siemens document (which it may or may not be), the ID was pretty challenging. That's why I said it was pretty good of Patricia to make the connection. Nuff said about this.
I think I've muddled what I was trying to say. Hopefully its understandable
3.Mar.2005 9.12am
No. It's not Geometric Slabserif 703.
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/bitstream/geometric-slabserif-703/
3.Mar.2005 2.13pm
Closest I can find are TheSerif Semibold and Officina Serif but it ain't either one...
3.Mar.2005 2.56pm
PMN Caecilia is also close, especially the lowercase s:
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/linotype/pmn-caecilia/75-bold/testdrive.html?s=There+are+six+billion&p=48
3.Mar.2005 4.28pm
Yves, are you thinking of Lexia from Dalton Maag? It's a lovely slab-serif, but not a match.
http://www.daltonmaag.com/fonts/exclusives/lexia.html?picpage=3
3.Mar.2005 4.56pm
Amasis is close also. I was also going to suggest Lexia because it is another close one but as Marc mentions, not a match. Where is this sample from?
4.Mar.2005 5.22pm
I have spent a lot of time hunting, and I can't seem to find this anywhere.

I thought a lot about whether something with one or two letters changed would match, but even that didn't seem promising, although Amasis with a new 'a' and 'r' would be pretty close.
So it seems this must be a rather new font, or one from an obscure source. I am still hoping to see an answer for this, just to satisfy my curiosity about it.
Let me guess -- it's by Jens Gelhaar again
8.Mar.2005 8.26am
You know, I haven't given up on this one yet. It's really bugging me. I found what I think is the closest yet: Placebo Serif by Thierry Puyfoulhoux of Presence Typo. The serifs are not quite right, but the basic shapes of letters are quite close. (IMHO)
Maybe our answer is going to be another font by this designer..
8.Mar.2005 8.38am
It would be nice if we knew the source - Jonas??
8.Mar.2005 8.53am
I was wondering if the numbers are from the same face?
E&F has a condensed version of a slab (Egyptienne) that looks like this but no regular. I wonder if maybe there was a regular designed that had to be nixed for some reason. The 5 sure has the curves.
The "b" in Placebo is not right.
8.Mar.2005 8.54am
I was thinking about this one, and Apex Serif is pretty close, except for some of its serif placements...
8.Mar.2005 9.26am
It seems highly unlikely that someone would customize one or two characters of an existing font when there are SO many fonts that resemble this. I bet it's a custom corporate or magazine font, but that's why it would be good to know where it came from.
8.Mar.2005 11.05am
Why would E&F only sell a condensed version of a face?
8.Mar.2005 11.59am
It's not Egyptienne. There is a regular version of this face - 50 styles in fact.
8.Mar.2005 12.10pm
Patricia, the Egyptienne you've posted is from a different foundry. The five is no match. The E&F Egyptienne five does, to me, look very similar to the posted sample. However E&F doesn't seem to offer a version that is not condensed, which to me is odd.
8.Mar.2005 12.53pm
Looking for a sample of Boton Medium.
8.Mar.2005 1.27pm
Here is Boton Medium, and it's not a match. The serifs on the c and s, are just the most obvious problems.
Whatever this is, it's not from one of the major foundries, unless it's a custom face they did. It's the sort of thing Font Bureau might do, as a limited face for a special customer.
8.Mar.2005 1.30pm
Ryan, can you show us a better (more complete & larger) sample of Apex Serif? The link you gave shows only a too small image for me, and not enough of the font.
8.Mar.2005 7.02pm
Could it be Siemens slab? Unfortunately the bold is a crappy jpeg but the serifs match from what I can see. This quote has to do with business machines and M2M and all that stuff (did some google research since Jonas seems to have disappeared). Proprietary font would explain why nobody can find it.
8.Mar.2005 7.30pm
Found a sample with a few more characters.

8.Mar.2005 9.44pm
Hehe. I attributed this quote to Lars Godell of Forrester Research (speaking about M2M) last week when trying to find where this sample was from.
Now it seems you've found the same thing and a bit more as it seems you've found the original sample! Where is it from?

Nonetheless, I think you've got it. I think this is Siemens Slab Bold. Now pull back the curtain and tell us how you did it. Or maybe, like any Magician worth his salt, you should never reveal your secrets.
8.Mar.2005 10.05pm
The proverbial lightbulb...
But my research (google) attributed the quote to Wolfgang Grulke of South African think tank Futureworld.
The sample I posted is from
http://www.tdc.org/news/2002Results/Siemens.html
I hope this Jonas dude appreciates our combined effort. He seems to have fallen off the face of the earth! If he'd only replied to our MANY requests for the source of the sample this might have been cleared up days ago.
8.Mar.2005 10.35pm
I think Wolfgang Grulke mentions "some 50 billion machines" while Lars Godell has that exact quote from the original sample. Both deal with M2M. Yeah, I wish Jonas would come back and shed some light on this but it seems this thread is now an orphan. Still, thanks to your efforts it's another one in the solved column and now we've all learned about Siemens Slab Bold, and perhaps will consider it in a future type-ID so it's all good.
9.Mar.2005 6.50am
Great work Patty! It pays to be up on your type award winners, although it should be rare for us ever to see this one again, since it is proprietary. So the implication of that is that the original sample was a quote of Godell/Grulke in a Siemens publication? (seems plausible)

Well, anyway, I filed that sample in with my Slab Serif fonts, so I will recognize it if there is a next time. I'm just glad I don't have to keep hunting for more slab serif samples
9.Mar.2005 7.12am
Actually - we have seen it before...
9.Mar.2005 7.23am
Well that seemed to be about Siemens Sans, or did I miss something in that link? It was also 11 months ago. How good do you think my memory is?
(Lots of times I don't even read a thread if it looks like it was solved while I wasn't looking, which is often.)
Still, I'm glad to know about it THIS time.
9.Mar.2005 7.28am
OK, now I see it. Romesh pointed to the same URW sample page. How could I have forgotten that??
(never mind)
9.Mar.2005 10.03am
I remember that last thread clearly but whether we've seen the custom Siemens family before isn't in doubt. Like Mike said, a passing glance at the family almost a year ago was hardly enough to register all the destinctive shapes of the variant slab face, and since it was a corporate face, I never thought we'd see it again unless someone asked "what's the siemen's face?" at which point a bell would ring. BUt without any sort of indication that the source of this was a Siemens document (which it may or may not be), the ID was pretty challenging. That's why I said it was pretty good of Patricia to make the connection. Nuff said about this.
I think I've muddled what I was trying to say. Hopefully its understandable
3.Mar.2005 2.19pm
It's a pretty recent font, I believe by a British foundry. I've seen it
announced and remember checking it, but it's already a couple
of months ago
3.Mar.2005 9.04am
Try GoeSlab703