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Linotype


 

Originally an American company, formed in 1886 to market the linecaster invented by Ottmar Mergenthaler, Mergenthaler Linotype (pronounced "LINEotype" {{IPA|/'laɪnəˌtaɪp/}}) became the world's leading manufacturer of book and newspaper typesetting equipment. Only the United States/England based Monotype seriously challenged it outside North America in book production.

Related Topics:
1886 - Ottmar Mergenthaler - United States - England - Monotype - North America

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Linotype GmbH, the German office of the company, was to become the dominant offshoot. Through a relationship with the type foundry D. Stempel AG (a company that was gradually acquired entirely), many of the 20th century's best typefaces became its best-known — designs such as Optima and Palatino.

Related Topics:
German - Type foundry - 20th century - Typeface - Optima - Palatino

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The company, as so many in the printing industry, endured a complex post-war history, during which printing technology went through two revolutions — first moving to phototypesetting, then to digital.

Related Topics:
Post-war - Phototypesetting - Digital

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Now called Linotype Library GmbH, it is a subsidiary of the printing manufacturer and former rival, Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG. The modern Linotype assets consist of a large library of type designs and trademarks, many the result of its large number of acquisitions, which it exploits by manufacturing digital typefaces. It frequently brings out new designs from established and new type designers.

Related Topics:
Subsidiary - Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG

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