Wir sind jetzt auf der Instanz https://typo.social zu finden.
Unser Account dort lautet @typographische bzw. https://typo.social/@typographische
#move
Ihr findet die Typographische Gesellschaft München e.V. (tgm) bis aufs weitere unter
@typographische@typo.social
Impressum: http://tgm-online.de/verein/impressum
Homepage | https://tgm-online.de |
Fortbildung | https://tgm-online.de/angebot/?type=tgm-angebot-Fortbildung |
Wir sind jetzt auf der Instanz https://typo.social zu finden.
Unser Account dort lautet @typographische bzw. https://typo.social/@typographische
#move
Oh hey, if you have a spot free on your calendar for some (midday…evening…or even mid-morning) type nerdery stop by a screen near you on Nov 7! Though it may seem tangential there might even be a story about angry students and a dean that gets a chocolate crème pie in the face!
Rob Roy Kelly’s published research — including <em>American Wood Type 1828–1900</em> (1969) — helped fuel a revival of interest in nineteenth-century American printing types. His work continues to be an important starting point for current scholarly inquiry. The University of Texas Press published a monograph I researched, wrote, and designed The <em>Rob Roy Kelly American Wood Type Collection: A History and Catalog</em> which functions as a ‘close’ reading of the collection. I’ve approached the collection as more than simply the 18,000+ pieces of wood type acquired by Kelly and dynamically defined it in broader terms as a range of objects, publications, research papers, and attendant activities in a number of archives around the United States. Viewing the collection broadly has provided the opportunity to look past Kelly as the sole instigator and investigator and perceive him as a link in the broader network of relationships that led to the success of his research project. The physical presence of the published book has helped me reconsider my own research work for the manuscript, not simply as a mode of historicization, but as developing a set of tools that could be useful to other (typographic) research projects.
RT @BM_Berlin@twitter.com
Today we can introduce you to another newcomer.
The beautiful »Goyert« letters from the art shop in Cologne have found their way to us.
Many thanks to our member Frank!
RT @gutjahr@twitter.com
Ein Shoutout auch an alle Leute, die noch immer gedankenlos ihr gesamtes Adressbuch mit jeder App teilen, die sie sich aufs Telefon laden. Ihr macht es diesen Plattformen leicht, Eure Freunde und Bekannten auf ewig durchs gesamte Internet zu tracken und zu verhökern.