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Monotype Imaging

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Monotype Imaging
FormerlyLanston Monotype Machine Company (1887–1936)
Monotype Corporation (1936–1999)
Agfa Monotype Corporation (1999–2004)
Company typePrivate
Nasdaq: TYPE
IndustryPre-press and pre-media services
machinery industry and plant construction Edit this on Wikidata
Founded1887; 137 years ago (1887) (as Lanston Monotype Machine Company)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Headquarters,
U.S.
Key people
Ninan Chacko (CEO)
ProductsFonts
ParentHGGC
Subsidiaries
Websitewww.monotype.com
Footnotes / references
[1]

Monotype Imaging Holdings Inc., founded as Lanston Monotype Machine Company in 1887 in Philadelphia by Tolbert Lanston, is an American (historically Anglo-American) company that specializes in digital typesetting and typeface design for use with consumer electronics devices.[2] Based in Woburn, Massachusetts, the company has been responsible for many developments in printing technology—in particular the Monotype machine, which was a fully mechanical hot metal typesetter, that produced texts automatically, all single type. Monotype was involved in the design and production of many typefaces in the 20th century. Monotype developed many of the most widely used typeface designs, including Times New Roman, Gill Sans, Arial, Bembo and Albertus.

Via acquisitions including Linotype GmbH, International Typeface Corporation, Bitstream, FontShop, URW, Hoefler & Co., Fontsmith, Fontworks [ja] and Colophon Foundry, the company has gained the rights to major font families including Helvetica, ITC Franklin Gothic, Optima, ITC Avant Garde, Palatino, FF DIN and Gotham. It also owns MyFonts, used by many independent font design studios.[3] The company is owned by HGGC, a private equity firm.[4]

History

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Monotype System

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Monotype caster

The Lanston Monotype Machine Company was founded by Tolbert Lanston in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1887. Lanston had a patented mechanical method of punching out metal types from cold strips of metal which were set (hence typesetting) into a matrix for the printing press. In 1896, Lanston patented the first hot metal typesetting machine and Monotype issued Modern Condensed, its first typeface. The licenses for the Lanston type library have been acquired by P22, a digital type foundry based in Buffalo, New York.

In a search for funding, the company set up a branch in London around 1897 under the name Lanston Monotype Corporation Ltd, generally known as the Monotype Corporation.[5][6] In 1899, a new factory was built in Salfords near Redhill in Surrey where it has been located for over a century. The company was of sufficient size to justify the construction of its own Salfords railway station.

The Monotype machine worked by casting letters from "hot metal" (molten metal) as pieces of type. Thus spelling mistakes could be corrected by adding or removing individual letters. This was particularly useful for "quality" printing - such as books. In contrast, the Linotype machine—a direct competitor[7]—formed a complete line of type in one bar. Editing these required replacing an entire line (and if the replacement ran onto another line, the rest of the paragraph). But Linotype slugs were easier to handle if moving a complete section of text around a page. This was more useful for "quick" printing - such as newspapers.

The typesetting machines were continually improved in the early years of the 20th century, with a typewriter style keyboard for entering the type being introduced in 1906. This arrangement addressed the need to vary the space between words so that all lines were the same length.

The keyboard operator types the copy, each key punching holes in a roll of paper tape that will control the separate caster. A drum on the keyboard indicates to the operator the space required for each line. This information is also punched in the paper. Before fitting the tape to the caster it is turned over so that the first holes read on each line set the width of the variable space. The subsequent holes determine the position of a frame, or die case, that holds the set of matrices for the face being used. Each matrix is a rectangle of bronze recessed with the shape of the letter. Once the matrix is positioned over the mould that forms the body of the type being cast, molten type metal is injected.

To promote its image, the company ran a magazine, the Monotype Recorder, over most of the twentieth century, and also ran a compositor (typesetter operator) training school in London.[8][9] In 1936, the company was floated on the London Stock Exchange and became the Monotype Corporation Ltd. Board members of the company included future Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, Vice-Chairman, and other businessmen connected to publishing.[9][10]

Typefounding

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A sample of various Monotype designs in digital format.

Monotype's role in design history is not merely due to their supply of printing equipment but due to their commissioning of many of the most important typefaces of the twentieth century.

The company's first face, issued in 1896, was a rather generic design, now named Modern, influenced by Bodoni and Scotch Roman designs. However, by the 1920s, the company's British branch was well known for commissioning popular, historically influenced designs that revived some of the best typefaces of the past, with particular attention to the early period of printing from the Renaissance to the late eighteenth century.[11][12][13][14] This series of releases was a major part of the typographic renaissance of the period, an expansion of the Arts and Crafts movement interest in printing into the more workaday world of general-purpose printing. Key executives of the company in this period included historian and adviser Stanley Morison, publicity manager Beatrice Warde, engineering expert Frank Hinman Pierpont and draughtsman Fritz Stelzer (the latter two both recruited from the German printing industry, although Pierpont was American), under managing director William Isaac Burch, who led the company from 1924 to 1942.[15] Despite tensions within the company, particularly between the historically minded faction of Morison and Warde and Pierpont in Salfords, notable typefaces commissioned included Gill Sans, Times New Roman and Perpetua, and the company maintained high standards of development allowing it to produce designs with good spacing, careful adaptation of the same basic design to different sizes and even color on the page, essential qualities for balanced body text.[16][17][18][19]

Historian James Mosley, who worked closely with Monotype in the 1950s and onwards, has commented:

The English Monotype Corporation of the interwar years looks in retrospect rather like one of the great public bodies of the period, for example the British Broadcasting Corporation or London Transport... benevolent monopolies ruled by autocrats who revelled in the role of patron of the arts on a scale exceeding that of Italian Renaissance princes.

Monotype enjoyed, in Britain at least, something approaching a monopoly in book and better-quality magazine typesetting.. .Monotype exploited the glamor of its new typefaces... with brilliant publicity, for which Morison and his devoted young American recruit Beatrice Warde were partly responsible.[20]

The American branch lagged behind the British in artistic reputation. Their designs are now often rather obscure, since (unlike products from the British branch) few have been made widely available through bundling with Microsoft products. The company employed Frederic Goudy on several serif font projects which were well received at the time, and on staff type designer Sol Hess, who created the geometric sans-serif Twentieth Century as a competitor to the German Futura.[21][22][23][24]

Decline

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The founding-stone of the former Monotype House in London, now in the collection of the Type Archive, London.
An index of typefaces issued by Monotype.

Monotype entered a decline from the 1960s onwards. This was caused by the reduction in use of hot metal typesetting and replacement with phototypesetting and lithography in mass-market printing.[25][26][27] This offered considerable efficiencies, such as no need to print books from solid metal type, quicker setting of type and a reduced number of operators needed.[28][29] It also promised a more diverse and exciting range of fonts than that possible with hot metal, where it is necessary to own life-size matrices for every size of every font to be used.[30]

Monotype made the transition to cold type and began to market its own "Monophoto" phototypesetting systems,[31] but these suffered from problems. Its first devices were heavily based on hot metal machinery, with glass pictures of characters which would be reproduced on photographic paper replacing the matrices used to cast metal type.[32][33] While this reduced the need for retraining, the resulting devices often set type slowly compared to legacy-free next-generation devices from providers such as Photon and Compugraphic, and were often more expensive.[34][35] Its devices were slow to incorporate use of electronics, and while its type library was of high quality, changing tastes and the development of other companies' libraries competed with this.[34] Its type library was also easily pirated, since fonts have only limited copyright protection. The company was eventually split into three divisions: Monotype International, which manufactured spinning mirror switched laser beam phototypesetters; Monotype Limited, which continued the hot metal machines; and Monotype Typography, which designed and sold typefaces. A research and development department was set up in Cambridge to isolate it from day to day production issues.

Monotype in the UK continued to enjoy prestige through the 1970s with the patronage of major British printers such as the university presses at Oxford and Cambridge; it also enjoyed some success with its Lasercomp laser-based typesetting system from the 1970s onwards, developed by the Cambridge research group.[34][36] However, new technology and finally publishing software such as Quark XPress and Aldus PageMaker running on general-purpose computers ate away at its competitiveness in the market of complete typesetting solutions by the 1990s.[37]

Monotype, however, has continued in business, for instance marketing typeface designs to third-party buyers, computing companies such as Microsoft (many fonts on Microsoft computers in particular are Monotype-designed) and companies and organisations such as London Transport and the UK parliament requiring custom digital typefaces.[38][39][40] Much of its metal type equipment and archives were donated to the Type Museum collection in London; other materials are held at St Bride Library.[41]

The history and decline of the hot metal American Lanston Monotype Corporation is described in full detail by Richard L. Hopkins, in Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype. The origin of digital Typesetting.[42] In 2004, P22 type foundry bought the "Lanston Type Co." from Gerald Giampa.[43]

The history of the English brand can be found in: Judy Slinn, Sebastian Carter, Richard Southall: The History of the Monotype Corporation, Vanbrugh Press & Printing historical Society, Woodstock, London, 2014, ISBN 978-0993051005

Consolidation, reorganization, and expansion

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In 1992, The Monotype Corporation Ltd. appointed Administrative Receivers on 5 March and four days later Monotype Typography Ltd. was established. Cromas Holdings, an investment company based in Switzerland, bought the Monotype Corporation Ltd. and Monotype Inc. (excluding Monotype Typography) and five other direct subsidiary companies in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Singapore. Monotype Systems Ltd. was the adopted name for the new organization with Peter Purdy as Chairman, the name Monotype was under license from Monotype Typography Ltd which retained the trademark Monotype. Monotype Systems Ltd. focused on selling pre-press software and hardware, raster image processors and workflow.

Cromas Holdings reorganized its publishing interests with the formation of the International Publishing Asset Holding Ltd. effectively controlling Monotype Systems Ltd., QED Technology Ltd., and GB Techniques Ltd.

The company acquired Berthold Communications; the UK subsidiary of the German composing equipment supplier.

In June 2002, Monotype Systems Limited was re-branded, IPA Systems Limited, as this marked the end of the existing trademark licence with Monotype Corporation. In the US Monotype Inc became alfaQuest Technologies Limited. Both companies still sell pre-press software and hardware.

In 1999, Agfa-Compugraphic acquired the company, which was renamed Agfa Monotype. In late 2004, after six years under the Agfa Corporation, the Monotype assets were acquired by TA Associates, a private equity investment firm based in Boston. The company was incorporated as Monotype Imaging, with a focus on the company's traditional core competencies of typography and professional printing.

Monotype was the first company to produce a digital version of the handwritten Persian script, Persian Nasta'liq. A Chinese "keyboard" was developed to typeset Chinese characters; it consisted of a book with a stylus. As the pages were turned, the page number was detected electrically and this was combined with the position of the character selected by the stylus on a large grid.

In 2003, the company launched Fontwise, the first software to audit desktops for licensed and unlicensed (not necessarily illegal) fonts.[44]

On 2 October 2006, the company acquired Linotype GmbH, a subsidiary of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen.[45]

On 18 September 2006, the company acquired China Type Design Limited, a typeface design and production company based in Hong Kong. CTDL was responsible for developing Microsoft JhengHei, the default traditional Chinese interface font for Windows Vista. The deal also secured an exclusive relationship with Creative Calligraphy Center (CCC), a font production company in Zhuhai, China, with 30 production specialists.[46]

On 11 December 2009, the company acquired Planetweb, a developer specialized in applications and development tools for embedded devices.[47]

On 8 December 2010, the company acquired Ascender Corporation, a provider of fonts and font technologies used in computers, mobile devices, consumer electronics and software products.[48]

In March 2012, the company acquired Bitstream Inc., a digital font retailer. The deal also gave Monotype ownership of the MyFonts font sale website used by many independent designers and its WhatTheFont recognition service.[49][50]

On 15 July 2014, the company acquired FontShop, the last large independent digital font retailer.[51]

In October 2019 Monotype changed ownership to HGGC, a private equity firm.[52] A few months later, on January 27, 2020, the company added FontSmith, an independent London foundry, to its font catalog.[53]

On May 18, 2020, Monotype made another major expansion by purchasing URW Type Foundry from Global Graphics plc.[54] In late 2021 it continued its expansion by acquiring iconic New York company Hoefler & Co. (created by Jonathan Hoefler in 1989), thus increasing its library with well-known fonts such as Gotham, Knockout, Mercury, Sentinel, Chronicle, Decimal, and Archer.[55]

On 19 July 2023, Monotype acquired Japanese type foundry Fontworks.[56]

On 4 May 2023, Monotype Corporation acquired 39 typefaces from the Font Bureau library.[57]

In 2024, Monotype acquired the rights to typefaces from US type foundry Sharp Type, but not the company.[58]

Typefaces

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "FORM 10-K".
  2. ^ 2008 SEC Annual Report:[permanent dead link].
  3. ^ Friedman, Sara (25 August 2023). "Where do fonts come from? This one business, mostly". The Hustle. Retrieved 8 September 2023.
  4. ^ Quito, Anne (23 October 2021). "A famous type foundry's sale to a PE-backed giant has rattled the font industry". Quartz. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  5. ^ The Iron Age. Chilton Company. 1899.
  6. ^ United States Investor. F.P.Bennett. 1922.
  7. ^ Office (U.S.), Government Printing (29 July 2011). Keeping America Informed: The United States Government Printing Office 150 Years of Service to the Nation: The United States Government Printing Office 150 Years of Service to the Nation. Government Printing Office. ISBN 978-0-16-089118-2.
  8. ^ "Monotype Recorder back issues". Metal Type Library collection. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  9. ^ a b Patrick Duffy (2 March 2017). The Skilled Compositor, 1850–1914: An Aristocrat Among Working Men. Taylor & Francis. pp. 111–121. ISBN 978-1-351-88183-8.
  10. ^ "Menu & Programme of Arrangements at The Dinner on December 17–1937 on the completion of the 40th year of the Lanston Monotype Corporation Limited, Founded in London 13 December 1897" (PDF). Metal Type. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  11. ^ McKitterick, David (2004). A history of Cambridge University Press (1. publ. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521308038.
  12. ^ "Modern". MyFonts. Monotype. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  13. ^ Shinn, Nick. "Lacunæ" (PDF). Codex. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  14. ^ Badaracco, Claire (1991). "Innovative Industrial Design and Modern Public Culture: The Monotype Corporation, 1922–1932" (PDF). Business & Economic History. 20 (second series). Business History Conference: 226–233. Retrieved 19 December 2015.
  15. ^ Badaracco, Claire (1996). "Rational Language and Print Design in Communication Management". Design Issues. 12 (1): 26–37. doi:10.2307/1511743. JSTOR 1511743.
  16. ^ "Fonts designed by Monotype Staff". Identifont. Retrieved 1 July 2015.
  17. ^ Mosley, James (2001). "Review: A Tally of Types". Journal of the Printing History Society. 3, new series: 63–67. The surviving records of the progress of some of the classic typefaces demonstrate that their exemplary final quality was due to a relentless willingness on the part of 'the works' to make and remake the punches over and over again until the result was satisfactory. The progression of series 270 from the weak Poliphilus Modernised to the familiar Bembo is an object lesson in the success of this technique. That it was [engineering manager Frank] Pierpont himself who was central to this drive for quality is made abundantly clear by the abrupt changes that are seen after his retirement in 1937.
  18. ^ Rhatigan, Daniel (September 2014). "Gill Sans after Gill" (PDF). Forum (28): 3–7. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
  19. ^ Rhatigan, Dan. "Time and Times again". Monotype. Retrieved 28 July 2015.
  20. ^ Mosley, James. "Eric Gill's Perpetua Type". Fine Print.
  21. ^ Goudy, Frederic (1946). A half-century of type design and typography, vol 1. New York: The Typophiles. pp. 121–124. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  22. ^ Shaw, Paul. "An appreciation of Frederic W. Goudy as a type designer". Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  23. ^ Rogers, Bruce (January 1923). "Printer's Note". Monotype: A Journal of Composing Room Efficiency: 23. This issue of Monotype is set in a trial font of a new version of Garamond's design ... the type ornaments, modelled on 16th century ones, will also be available.
  24. ^ "LTC Garamont". MyFonts. LTC. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  25. ^ Third Tripartite Technical Meeting for the Printing and Allied Trades, Geneva, 1990. International Labour Organization. 1 January 1990. pp. 12–29. ISBN 978-92-2-107441-0.
  26. ^ Reports of Tax Cases. H.M. Stationery Office. 1993. pp. 470–507.
  27. ^ Simon Eliot; Jonathan Rose (24 August 2011). A Companion to the History of the Book. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 286–289. ISBN 978-1-4443-5658-8.
  28. ^ United States. Bureau of Labor Statistics (1984). Occupational Outlook Handbook. Bureau of Labor Statistics. pp. 316–7.
  29. ^ Philip G. Altbach; Edith S. Hoshino (8 May 2015). International Book Publishing: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 72. ISBN 978-1-134-26126-0.
  30. ^ Mosley, James (2003). "Reviving the Classics: Matthew Carter and the Interpretation of Historical Models". In Mosley, James; Re, Margaret; Drucker, Johanna; Carter, Matthew (eds.). Typographically Speaking: The Art of Matthew Carter. Princeton Architectural Press. pp. 31–34. ISBN 9781568984278. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
  31. ^ "Getting to Know "Monophoto" Filmsetters - 1963". 14 April 2017.
  32. ^ Helmut Kipphan (31 July 2001). Handbook of Print Media: Technologies and Production Methods. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 1045. ISBN 978-3-540-67326-2.
  33. ^ The Monotype: How It Works. Monotype. 1957. pp. 10–16. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  34. ^ a b c Boag, Andrew (2000). "Monotype and Phototypesetting" (PDF). Journal of the Printing History Society: 57–77. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 March 2016. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  35. ^ Wallis, Lawrence. "Monotype: the long slippery slope". Bulletin of the Printing Historical Society: 1–6.
  36. ^ Maw, Martin (November 2013). History of Oxford University Press: Volume III: 1896 to 1970. OUP Oxford. pp. 277–307. ISBN 978-0-19-956840-6.
  37. ^ Romano, Frank. "The day the typesetting industry died". What They Think. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  38. ^ Castle, Bob; Carpenter, Victoria (6 September 2010). "Book Antiqua Parliamentary (Freedom of Information request)". Whatdotheyknow.com. Retrieved 27 March 2016.
  39. ^ Walters, John; Esterson, Simon. "Features: Robin Nicholas". Eye magazine. Retrieved 22 July 2016.
  40. ^ Shaw, Paul; Carter, Matthew. "Some history about Arial". Paul Shaw Letter Design. Retrieved 22 May 2015.
  41. ^ Mosley, James. "The materials of typefounding". Type Foundry. Retrieved 14 August 2015.
  42. ^ Hopkins 2012.
  43. ^ Spring, Jessica (14 June 2008). "P22: Fond Found Typography". Boxcar Press. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  44. ^ "Agfa Monotype Launches Fontwise from Monotype, the World's First Font Licence Management Solution". Business Wire. 30 September 2003.
  45. ^ "MONOTYPE IMAGING ACQUIRES LINOTYPE" (Press release). Linotype. August 2006.
  46. ^ "Monotype Imaging Acquires China Type Design Limited; Acquisition Sets Up Expansion of Font Solutions into Asian Consumer Electronics and Printer Markets". Business Wire. 18 September 2006.
  47. ^ "Monotype Imaging Acquires Planetweb". Business Wire. 11 December 2009.
  48. ^ "Monotype Imaging Acquires Ascender Corp". Business Wire. 8 December 2010.
  49. ^ Shankland, Stephen. "Monotype gets more digital, buys Bitstream font biz". CNet. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  50. ^ "Monotype Imaging Completes Acquisition of Bitstream's Font Business". Business Wire. 19 March 2012.
  51. ^ "Monotype Acquires FontShop International" (Press release). Business Wire. 16 July 2014.
  52. ^ "HGGC Completes Acquisition of Monotype Imaging Holdings Inc". Business Wire. 11 October 2019.
  53. ^ "Monotype Acquires Fontsmith". Monotype. 27 January 2020. Retrieved 27 January 2020.
  54. ^ "Monotype Agrees to Acquire URW Type Foundry". Monotype. 18 May 2020. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  55. ^ "Monotype Announces the Acquisition of Iconic Type Foundry Hoefler&Co". Monotype. 15 September 2021. Retrieved 15 September 2021.
  56. ^ "Monotype announces deal to acquire Fontworks – an iconic Japanese Type Foundry". Monotype. 19 July 2023. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  57. ^ "Monotype inks deal with The Font Bureau to acquire collection of type designer David Berlow's typefaces". Monotype. 4 May 2023. Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  58. ^ Monotype Acquires an Award-Winning Type Collection from Sharp Type's Library and Welcomes Sharp Type as a Creative Partner
  59. ^ "Pastonchi". Fonts.com. Monotype. Retrieved 15 September 2015.
  60. ^ "Pastonchi: a specimen of a new letter for use on the Monotype". The Library. s4-IX (4): 421–422. 1928. doi:10.1093/library/s4-IX.4.421.

Bibliography

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  • Hopkins, Richard (2012). Tolbert Lanston and the Monotype: The Origin of Digital Typesetting. Tampa, Florida: University of Tampa Press. ISBN 978-159732-100-6.

Further reading

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