What is the name for these serif-like features of stereotypical “Old West” lettering?
Clash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP
up vote
29
down vote
favorite
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?
typography terminology history serif
add a comment |
up vote
29
down vote
favorite
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?
typography terminology history serif
add a comment |
up vote
29
down vote
favorite
up vote
29
down vote
favorite
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?
typography terminology history serif
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?
typography terminology history serif
typography terminology history serif
asked Dec 4 at 20:30
Quuxplusone
24825
24825
add a comment |
add a comment |
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.
Source typekit.com
There are more examples in this answer
There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search
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
add a comment |
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.
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
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "174"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgraphicdesign.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f117804%2fwhat-is-the-name-for-these-serif-like-features-of-stereotypical-old-west-lette%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
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.
Source typekit.com
There are more examples in this answer
There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search
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
add a comment |
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.
Source typekit.com
There are more examples in this answer
There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search
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
add a comment |
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.
Source typekit.com
There are more examples in this answer
There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search
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.
Source typekit.com
There are more examples in this answer
There's also a "median spurs" tag at myfonts.com advanced search
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
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.
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
add a comment |
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.
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
add a comment |
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.
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.
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
add a comment |
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
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Graphic Design Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.
Please pay close attention to the following guidance:
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fgraphicdesign.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f117804%2fwhat-is-the-name-for-these-serif-like-features-of-stereotypical-old-west-lette%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown