What is the name for these serif-like features of stereotypical “Old West” lettering?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP











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Looking at the dedication plaque on the Salt Lake Temple, I was moved to wonder: What's the deal with this stereotypically "American Old West" style of lettering, where almost every letter has sort of "serifs" sticking out of the middle of each stroke?



Is there an accepted name for these seriffy-looking things?



What is the history of this style of lettering? Was it actually common in the Old West? Do the little seriffy things skeuomorphically imitate some inherent quirk of old wood-block type, or have they always been purely decorative?



Seriffy thing in red circleSeriffy thingsSeriffy thing in red circle










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    up vote
    29
    down vote

    favorite
    3












    Looking at the dedication plaque on the Salt Lake Temple, I was moved to wonder: What's the deal with this stereotypically "American Old West" style of lettering, where almost every letter has sort of "serifs" sticking out of the middle of each stroke?



    Is there an accepted name for these seriffy-looking things?



    What is the history of this style of lettering? Was it actually common in the Old West? Do the little seriffy things skeuomorphically imitate some inherent quirk of old wood-block type, or have they always been purely decorative?



    Seriffy thing in red circleSeriffy thingsSeriffy thing in red circle










    share|improve this question























      up vote
      29
      down vote

      favorite
      3









      up vote
      29
      down vote

      favorite
      3






      3





      Looking at the dedication plaque on the Salt Lake Temple, I was moved to wonder: What's the deal with this stereotypically "American Old West" style of lettering, where almost every letter has sort of "serifs" sticking out of the middle of each stroke?



      Is there an accepted name for these seriffy-looking things?



      What is the history of this style of lettering? Was it actually common in the Old West? Do the little seriffy things skeuomorphically imitate some inherent quirk of old wood-block type, or have they always been purely decorative?



      Seriffy thing in red circleSeriffy thingsSeriffy thing in red circle










      share|improve this question













      Looking at the dedication plaque on the Salt Lake Temple, I was moved to wonder: What's the deal with this stereotypically "American Old West" style of lettering, where almost every letter has sort of "serifs" sticking out of the middle of each stroke?



      Is there an accepted name for these seriffy-looking things?



      What is the history of this style of lettering? Was it actually common in the Old West? Do the little seriffy things skeuomorphically imitate some inherent quirk of old wood-block type, or have they always been purely decorative?



      Seriffy thing in red circleSeriffy thingsSeriffy thing in red circle







      typography terminology history serif






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      share|improve this question











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      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 4 at 20:30









      Quuxplusone

      24825




      24825




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes

















          up vote
          18
          down vote



          accepted










          About the style,



          Tuscan Fonts




          Tuscans can be described as decorative display faces with characteristics that usually include one or more of the following: bi- or trifurcated (branched) serifs or mannered stroke terminations (pointed, rounded, concaved, chiseled, wedged…); an active, energetic contour; and medial decoration. Tuscans can also be additively ornamented (shades, shadows, fills, patterned interiors…).




          The whole history at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum




          ... The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations with a symmetrical spur (typically referred to as medial spurs) was added to the middle of the letterforms.




          The origin dates from the nineteenth century when the typography leaves the printed paper to move to large posters with giant letters made in wood types simulating the store signs. The short reading allows more attention to the ornamented strokes than readability, therefore, the most ornate were the most popular.



          the old reader



          Source typekit.com



          There are more examples in this answer



          There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search






          share|improve this answer


















          • 5




            I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 4 at 22:04











          • It's in the answer, second link.
            – Danielillo
            Dec 4 at 22:37






          • 5




            A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 5 at 1:42






          • 1




            I see, answer updated
            – Danielillo
            Dec 5 at 17:50

















          up vote
          18
          down vote













          Spurs



          A small projection off of a main stroke.



          See #15 here.



          Although most explanations will use an uppercase G to show a sample, they are still spurs when protruding from a primary stroke of any glyph.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 5




            I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
            – Zach Saucier
            Dec 4 at 21:34










          • It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
            – WELZ
            Dec 4 at 21:40






          • 3




            @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
            – Mr Lister
            Dec 5 at 12:46










          • Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
            – Scott
            Dec 5 at 18:59










          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes








          up vote
          18
          down vote



          accepted










          About the style,



          Tuscan Fonts




          Tuscans can be described as decorative display faces with characteristics that usually include one or more of the following: bi- or trifurcated (branched) serifs or mannered stroke terminations (pointed, rounded, concaved, chiseled, wedged…); an active, energetic contour; and medial decoration. Tuscans can also be additively ornamented (shades, shadows, fills, patterned interiors…).




          The whole history at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum




          ... The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations with a symmetrical spur (typically referred to as medial spurs) was added to the middle of the letterforms.




          The origin dates from the nineteenth century when the typography leaves the printed paper to move to large posters with giant letters made in wood types simulating the store signs. The short reading allows more attention to the ornamented strokes than readability, therefore, the most ornate were the most popular.



          the old reader



          Source typekit.com



          There are more examples in this answer



          There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search






          share|improve this answer


















          • 5




            I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 4 at 22:04











          • It's in the answer, second link.
            – Danielillo
            Dec 4 at 22:37






          • 5




            A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 5 at 1:42






          • 1




            I see, answer updated
            – Danielillo
            Dec 5 at 17:50














          up vote
          18
          down vote



          accepted










          About the style,



          Tuscan Fonts




          Tuscans can be described as decorative display faces with characteristics that usually include one or more of the following: bi- or trifurcated (branched) serifs or mannered stroke terminations (pointed, rounded, concaved, chiseled, wedged…); an active, energetic contour; and medial decoration. Tuscans can also be additively ornamented (shades, shadows, fills, patterned interiors…).




          The whole history at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum




          ... The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations with a symmetrical spur (typically referred to as medial spurs) was added to the middle of the letterforms.




          The origin dates from the nineteenth century when the typography leaves the printed paper to move to large posters with giant letters made in wood types simulating the store signs. The short reading allows more attention to the ornamented strokes than readability, therefore, the most ornate were the most popular.



          the old reader



          Source typekit.com



          There are more examples in this answer



          There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search






          share|improve this answer


















          • 5




            I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 4 at 22:04











          • It's in the answer, second link.
            – Danielillo
            Dec 4 at 22:37






          • 5




            A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 5 at 1:42






          • 1




            I see, answer updated
            – Danielillo
            Dec 5 at 17:50












          up vote
          18
          down vote



          accepted







          up vote
          18
          down vote



          accepted






          About the style,



          Tuscan Fonts




          Tuscans can be described as decorative display faces with characteristics that usually include one or more of the following: bi- or trifurcated (branched) serifs or mannered stroke terminations (pointed, rounded, concaved, chiseled, wedged…); an active, energetic contour; and medial decoration. Tuscans can also be additively ornamented (shades, shadows, fills, patterned interiors…).




          The whole history at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum




          ... The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations with a symmetrical spur (typically referred to as medial spurs) was added to the middle of the letterforms.




          The origin dates from the nineteenth century when the typography leaves the printed paper to move to large posters with giant letters made in wood types simulating the store signs. The short reading allows more attention to the ornamented strokes than readability, therefore, the most ornate were the most popular.



          the old reader



          Source typekit.com



          There are more examples in this answer



          There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search






          share|improve this answer














          About the style,



          Tuscan Fonts




          Tuscans can be described as decorative display faces with characteristics that usually include one or more of the following: bi- or trifurcated (branched) serifs or mannered stroke terminations (pointed, rounded, concaved, chiseled, wedged…); an active, energetic contour; and medial decoration. Tuscans can also be additively ornamented (shades, shadows, fills, patterned interiors…).




          The whole history at the Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum




          ... The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations with a symmetrical spur (typically referred to as medial spurs) was added to the middle of the letterforms.




          The origin dates from the nineteenth century when the typography leaves the printed paper to move to large posters with giant letters made in wood types simulating the store signs. The short reading allows more attention to the ornamented strokes than readability, therefore, the most ornate were the most popular.



          the old reader



          Source typekit.com



          There are more examples in this answer



          There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Dec 5 at 17:36

























          answered Dec 4 at 21:37









          Danielillo

          19.2k12970




          19.2k12970







          • 5




            I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 4 at 22:04











          • It's in the answer, second link.
            – Danielillo
            Dec 4 at 22:37






          • 5




            A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 5 at 1:42






          • 1




            I see, answer updated
            – Danielillo
            Dec 5 at 17:50












          • 5




            I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 4 at 22:04











          • It's in the answer, second link.
            – Danielillo
            Dec 4 at 22:37






          • 5




            A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
            – Quuxplusone
            Dec 5 at 1:42






          • 1




            I see, answer updated
            – Danielillo
            Dec 5 at 17:50







          5




          5




          I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
          – Quuxplusone
          Dec 4 at 22:04





          I would further quote that excellent article: "The concave slab serif of the American Tuscan was further modified, with notches added to the capline and baseline to produce bifurcations and with symmetrical spurs (typically referred to as medial spurs) added to the middle of the letterforms."
          – Quuxplusone
          Dec 4 at 22:04













          It's in the answer, second link.
          – Danielillo
          Dec 4 at 22:37




          It's in the answer, second link.
          – Danielillo
          Dec 4 at 22:37




          5




          5




          A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
          – Quuxplusone
          Dec 5 at 1:42




          A link to the whole article is in the answer. That key quotation, containing the key phrase "medial spurs," is not in the answer (currently).
          – Quuxplusone
          Dec 5 at 1:42




          1




          1




          I see, answer updated
          – Danielillo
          Dec 5 at 17:50




          I see, answer updated
          – Danielillo
          Dec 5 at 17:50










          up vote
          18
          down vote













          Spurs



          A small projection off of a main stroke.



          See #15 here.



          Although most explanations will use an uppercase G to show a sample, they are still spurs when protruding from a primary stroke of any glyph.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 5




            I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
            – Zach Saucier
            Dec 4 at 21:34










          • It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
            – WELZ
            Dec 4 at 21:40






          • 3




            @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
            – Mr Lister
            Dec 5 at 12:46










          • Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
            – Scott
            Dec 5 at 18:59














          up vote
          18
          down vote













          Spurs



          A small projection off of a main stroke.



          See #15 here.



          Although most explanations will use an uppercase G to show a sample, they are still spurs when protruding from a primary stroke of any glyph.






          share|improve this answer
















          • 5




            I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
            – Zach Saucier
            Dec 4 at 21:34










          • It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
            – WELZ
            Dec 4 at 21:40






          • 3




            @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
            – Mr Lister
            Dec 5 at 12:46










          • Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
            – Scott
            Dec 5 at 18:59












          up vote
          18
          down vote










          up vote
          18
          down vote









          Spurs



          A small projection off of a main stroke.



          See #15 here.



          Although most explanations will use an uppercase G to show a sample, they are still spurs when protruding from a primary stroke of any glyph.






          share|improve this answer












          Spurs



          A small projection off of a main stroke.



          See #15 here.



          Although most explanations will use an uppercase G to show a sample, they are still spurs when protruding from a primary stroke of any glyph.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 4 at 20:33









          Scott

          144k14197408




          144k14197408







          • 5




            I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
            – Zach Saucier
            Dec 4 at 21:34










          • It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
            – WELZ
            Dec 4 at 21:40






          • 3




            @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
            – Mr Lister
            Dec 5 at 12:46










          • Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
            – Scott
            Dec 5 at 18:59












          • 5




            I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
            – Zach Saucier
            Dec 4 at 21:34










          • It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
            – WELZ
            Dec 4 at 21:40






          • 3




            @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
            – Mr Lister
            Dec 5 at 12:46










          • Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
            – Scott
            Dec 5 at 18:59







          5




          5




          I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
          – Zach Saucier
          Dec 4 at 21:34




          I thought you were right until I opened the link you provided. Based on it I thought you were wrong (because it's pointing out seemingly a completely different feature). But then I googled the term "spurs hand lettering" and realized you're right (again).
          – Zach Saucier
          Dec 4 at 21:34












          It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
          – WELZ
          Dec 4 at 21:40




          It's probably also related to spurs (which are cliché in ol' Western movies).
          – WELZ
          Dec 4 at 21:40




          3




          3




          @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
          – Mr Lister
          Dec 5 at 12:46




          @ZachSaucier the article in the link would have been better off without the pictures, which vary from confusing to just plain wrong.
          – Mr Lister
          Dec 5 at 12:46












          Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
          – Scott
          Dec 5 at 18:59




          Kind of mystified by the chosen answer -- like asking what a serif is.... and being told they are Humanist fonts. While true, it doesn't actually answer the question. Oh well :)
          – Scott
          Dec 5 at 18:59

















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