TYPOGRAPHICA 13 [New Series]. London: Lund Humphries, June 1966. Herbert Spencer [Editor].

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TYPOGRAPHICA 13
New Series, June 1966

Herbert Spencer  [Editor]

Herbert Spencer  [Editor]: TYPOGRAPHICA 13. London: Lund Humphries, June 1966. First edition [New Series]. Slim quarto. Printed thick wrappers. Printed dust jacket. 62 pp. Elaborately illustrated text and advertisements printed on multiple paper stocks. Spencer's legendary experimental typographic journal is coveted by multiple constituencies since Spencer vocally championed emerging trends such as Concrete Poetry, Semiotics and avant-garde Book Design. Jacket lightly soiled with edge wear and a very faint, illegible dated inkstamp to front panel. Interior unmarked and very clean. A very good copy.

9.5 x 12.25  magazine with 62 pages printed on a variety of paper stocks. Reproduction techniques for this issue include letterpress and offset-lithography. Paper stocks include matte and uncoated. Custom Binding includes bound-in printed vellum sheets.

Contents:

  • Tombstone Lettering on Slate by Frederick Burgess
  • Hong Kong Signs by Henry Steiner
  • Aesthetic Pattern Programmes by Eckhard Neumann
  • Type Size: a system of dimensional references by Ernst Hoch and Maurice Goldring
  • Of the Just Shaping of Letters book review by James Sutton

Typographica was the brainchild of founder, editor, designer and renowned typographer Herbert Spencer (Great Britain, 1924 – 2002), and had a brief life, totalling 32 issues published between 1949 and 1967. But its influence stretched and stretches far beyond its modest distribution and print runs of the time. For many graphic designers, Typographica is something of an obsession, to be collected if and when found, savored, and poured over for designs, and techniques not seen since.

Spencer never intended to turn a profit, so no expenses were spared in production (just like Alexey Brodovitch's Portfolio). Different papers, letterpress, tip-ins, and more were all employed in the presentation of an eclectic range of subject matter: Braille, locomotive lettering, sex and typography, typewriter faces, street lettering, matches, and avant-garde poetry all found their way into the magazine.

Urbane, prolific and unfailingly modest, Spencer was a reformer dedicated to improving standards of design in a field dominated by the printing industry's outdated conventions. But he was also an aesthete with a connoisseur's eye for the wild modernist innovations with letterforms and layout of the 1920s. Spencer launched the seminal publication, Typographica, in 1949, when he was 25, and edited, designed and sometimes wrote for it for 18 years. Equally at home publishing one of the first articles in Britain about concrete poetry (then an international phenomenon), or an illustrated study of the design challenges presented by Braille, he was a new kind of designer-editor, able to think both visually and verbally, and to fuse images and words in meaningful new relationships.

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