The Dunlap Broadside
When you’re charged with the first printing of the Declaration of Independence, there isn’t much time for fussing with the type.
Contributed by Nick Sherman on Jul 5th, 2012. Artwork published in
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20 Comments on “The Dunlap Broadside”
Caslon. I love this typeface. Twombly's Adobe version is better and Carter's version is just awesome. Either one of those come top preference for typesetting (maybe tied with Adobe Jenson Pro).
Fascinating read! Thanks for the effort involved with compiling this information.
Would you also consider FF Clifford a relevant typeface?
I probably would not consider FF Clifford very relevant. It has some characteristics in common with some of Caslon’s types, but if I listed every typeface that met those requirements, you’d never be able to read the entire thing.
A very interesting study. It seems to me that the only possible way to identify the source of Dunlap's types would be if the records of his shop have survived.
Interesting article Nick; well done.
It's been around 20 years since I read it through, but I had a quick look at Rollo Silver's rather definitive Typefounding in America, 1787–1825 which mentions up front “. . .sporadic attempts (at type founding) in America since Abel Beull’s work in 1769. . .”
Despite that lack of documentation, one must wonder if someone had imported Caslon punches or mats and was casting in Philadelphia. If that was the case, perhaps the variant characters were cast from replacement mats struck from re-cut punches? Difficult to know.
Just a note on the Relevant faces. Of course there's no shortage of strong opinion among typographer/printers but it's come down from above that ATF's Caslon 540 was a poor cut having been highly regularized, and most egregiously, had it's descenders shortened, specifically for use in (horrors) advertising headline work.
Did you instead mean to cite the P22/Giampa Lanston Caslon 337 which was digitized from the original Monotype drawings. I believe Monotype licensed from ATF and their drawings for Caslon 471, long considered the one of the better cuts of (metal) Caslon here in the States, complete with quaints, and swashes.
Excellent job, Nick.
As one who has it pointed out not only in our Annual 4th of July show "The Confounding Brothers" at the International Printing Museum in Carson, CA, but that info has been incorporated in our tours as well as our Director has audience members crank out their own "PRINTED" Declaration!" Great article with new additional facts!
Nick: Great job, as usual!
Nice job Nick. Love your method of directly comparing the different type samples.
For those interested in the lettering aspect of the Declaration, it just occurred to me that I've been saving a couple of clips from PBS’s 2005 documentary Saving the National Treasures. In it, the very talented calligrapher Brody Neuenschwander demonstrates the kind of lettering that graces the Declaration of Independence, Constitution, and Bill of Rights. It’s a beautiful thing to watch:
You can see more video of Neuenschwander in action on his site.
mjb,
Yeah, I only mention Caslon 540 as a less funky option for a Caslon at display sizes. I don’t really blame ATF (or, more likely, their customers) for wanting a more regularized option – the larger sizes of the original could be quite odd in places. That’s not to say that Caslon 540 is by any means the penultimate solution (or even that it’s necessarily good). Matthew Carter took a different approach with Big Caslon by retaining some of the funkiness but improving the most distracting quirks. I generally prefer that cut for large sizes.
Also, good call on the Lanston Caslon. I have never used it myself, and wasn’t familiar with its origins other than knowing that, like digital Caslon 540, it’s a revival of a revival (of a revival?).
After posting this article, I received a letterpress recreation of the Dunlap Broadside from Austin Jones. His reprint is set in Monotype Caslon 337. You can order one from his website.
Very nice reading contained herein, I was wondering if Austin Jones’ reproduction Dunlap Broadsides had a watermark, and if so, what of? Also, what is the composition of paper being used? Many thanks for the typographical education.
i noticed the print has a small bow line connecting any “ct” words i could find. i must know why.
That’s a ligature, i.e. a special metal sort that shows two (or more) letters at once. The bow line is a remnant of (or an allusion to) calligraphy. Its purpose is purely decorative. Quite a few digital fonts have such a ligature for ‘ct’, typically provided via the optional OpenType feature “discretionary ligatures”, see e.g. Adobe Caslon.
Thanks so much for this site. I learned to love type back in school at SJSU. I was lucky enought to take classes with some great typographers (Paul Sinn, Georgia Dever). Their passion for type was contagious and it sounds like you got the same bug.
I held this in my hands (gloved) and examined it during research for designing the invitation and event package for the grand opening of the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library at the University of Virginia.
Its there now should you want to research and view:
small.library.virginia.edu
More info here:
news.virginia.edu/…/did-y……
See more broadsides and typography, the current exhibition “American Broadsides to 1860” is interesting:
www.library.virginia.edu/…
Plus the Virginia Gazette, the Pennsylvania Evening Post:
uvamagazine.org/articles/re…
Wonderful article. I fly the E-4B Nightwatch; the font used to write UNITED STATES OF AMERICA down the side of those jets is Dunlap’s Caslon. It is used on Air Force One too