Teutonic was cut in wood first by William H. Page
and shown in James Conner’s Sons Typographic
Messenger, Vol.6 No.4 (October, 1871). [Rob Roy Kelly
American Wood Type Collection, via
D. Wolske] Shown in Rob Roy
Kelly’s 100 Wood Type Alphabets as
Teutonic, without lowercase. [Nick
Curtis]
Included in Headliners’ Morgan Press Collection as
MP 307. The Solotype
catalog shows it as Roxy (with lowercase) and also has
Wampum (caps only), which appears to be identical
except for the clipped ends of the serifs.
Digital interpretations include Alan Prescott’s Teutonic
Wood (APT, 1997, no lowercase), Jordan Davies’s
Teutonic (Wooden Type Fonts, 2005, with lowercase,
used for More…
Teutonic was cut in wood first by William H. Page and shown in James Conner’s Sons Typographic Messenger, Vol.6 No.4 (October, 1871). [Rob Roy Kelly American Wood Type Collection, via D. Wolske] Shown in Rob Roy Kelly’s 100 Wood Type Alphabets as Teutonic, without lowercase. [Nick Curtis]
Included in Headliners’ Morgan Press Collection as MP 307. The Solotype catalog shows it as Roxy (with lowercase) and also has Wampum (caps only), which appears to be identical except for the clipped ends of the serifs.
Digital interpretations include Alan Prescott’s Teutonic Wood (APT, 1997, no lowercase), Jordan Davies’s Teutonic (Wooden Type Fonts, 2005, with lowercase, used for sample), and Nick Curtis’s Fredericksburg (Nick’s Fonts, 2006, with added lowercase). Wampum was digitized by Alan Prescott as Warpath Roman (The Type Heritage Project, 2013).