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The Powerhouse Magazine
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A punch is a precise sculpture — a threedimensional letter form in reverse — that is struck into a small copper slab known as a matrix to create a mould. From this mould, individual pieces of type can be cast, again and again, in molten lead. It took about 65 years to make all the punches and matrices that are needed in the 21 fonts that compose Romain du Roi: each a different size, from 4 to 120 points, with upright and slanted letters, capital initials, numbers and punctuation. Hundreds of historical punches and matrices of various typefaces and dozens of books are on view at the Powerhouse Museum in its new exhibition - What’s your type? This is the first time these exquisite artefacts have been shown outside Europe, said H. George Fletcher, the curator of the show. Their arrival could not be more timely. They offer a reminder, in the ethereal era of bitmapping, that type was once the tangible province of engravers and metal casters who laboured in unforgiving but enduring media. To make a C with a cedilla, for example, involved
a lot more effort and thought than holding down the Option key on your Mac. A comma-shaped steel appendage had to be lashed with string to the bottom of the C punch to produce a new matrix. “People are practically printing books with their smartphones,” Mr. Fletcher said, in a tone suggesting that he did not think this was such a good idea. “It’s much more gratifying to be able to touch something and find out it is real, rather than a matter of bits and bytes.”
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There was a day when type had weight.
That is the weight of the steel punch that was used to produce a 120-point capital A in the typeface Romain du Roi. The roi in this case was the Sun King, Louis XIV of France, under whose reign the typeface was begun in 1694 at the royal printing house, the Imprimerie Royale.
People are practically printing books with their smartphones. -Mr. Fletcher
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The Powerhouse Magazine
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