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Elstob: a Fell-based font

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First a bit about me: I’m a professor of English medieval literature, fascinated since the 1980s by all things to do with type and lettering—both because paleography is a significant part of what I do and because of my struggles, as a young scholar, to get my KayPro II + dot-matrix printer to produce the characters needed for medieval texts. Since then I’ve produced several fonts based on medieval scripts, and also a general-purpose font called Junicode (loosely based on the Fell pica), which is pretty widely used—more because it’s free and has lots of goodies for medievalists than because of its design. I am self-taught and frankly a bit scared right now.

This is a variable font called “Elstob” after Elizabeth Elstob, a celebrated medieval scholar of the early 18th century. It takes as its starting point the Fell double pica used by the Oxford Press for dedications and the like in the decades around 1700. That face has its faults, but I think it has a kind of simplicity (for example, flat or flattish serifs, minimal or absent brackets) that make it a good model for a variable font. Elstob has three axes: weight, optical size, and grade. I have tried to keep the classic proportions and modernize the details, keeping the outlines as simple as possible to hold down file size. I hope to end up with a practical and readable typeface for websites having to do with medieval studies.

I won’t go into my own specific design concerns, but will just say that the farther I get from my models (heavier weights, smaller optical sizes) the more anxious I feel. Also, as I don’t think of this font as a revival, I am very willing to depart from the original for the sake of design improvements. I have been working on the roman and italic more or less simultaneously, so my samples have both (sorry). I welcome any advice this community can give.

Here are links to a PDF, a web page with the obligatory sliders and checkboxes, and a couple of images (here and here) from the 1925 specimen book, printed with type cast in the 1890s from the seventeenth-century matrices. And, of course, an image:



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