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Gill Sans also soon became used on the modernist, deliberately simple covers of Penguin Books, and was sold up to very large sizes which were often used in British posters and notices of the period. British Railways chose Gill Sans as the basis for its standard lettering when the railway companies were nationalised in 1948. Designed before setting documents entirely in sans-serif text was common, its standard weight is noticeably bolder than most modern body text fonts.Īn immediate success, the year after its release the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) chose it for all its posters, timetables and publicity material.

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Gill's aim was to blend the influences of Johnston, classic serif typefaces and Roman inscriptions to create a design that looked both cleanly modern and classical at the same time. Gill Sans was released in 1928 by Monotype, initially as a set of titling capitals that was quickly followed by a lower-case. Morison hoped that it could be Monotype's competitor to a wave of German sans-serif families in a new " geometric" style, which included Erbar, Futura and Kabel, all being launched to considerable attention in Germany during the late 1920s.

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Gill was commissioned to develop his alphabet into a full metal type family by his friend Stanley Morison, an influential Monotype executive and historian of printing. By this time Gill had become a prominent stonemason, artist and creator of lettering in his own right and had begun to work on creating typeface designs. In addition, Gill sketched an alphabet for Cleverdon as a guide for him to use for future notices and announcements. In 1926, Douglas Cleverdon, a young printer-publisher, opened a bookshop in Bristol, and Gill painted a fascia for the shop for him in sans-serif capitals.

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As a young artist, Gill had assisted Johnston in its early development stages. Gill Sans is based on Edward Johnston's 1916 "Underground Alphabet", the corporate font of London Underground. Gill Sans is a humanist sans-serif typeface designed by Eric Gill and released by the British branch of Monotype from 1928 onwards.








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