Everything about Monotype Corporation totally explained
Monotype Imaging Inc. is a
typesetting and
typeface design company (
type foundry) responsible for many developments in
printing technology — in particular the Monotype machine which was the first fully mechanical typesetter — and the design and production of typefaces in the
19th and
20th centuries. Its most widely known product, by far, is the font
Times New Roman.
History
The
Lanston Monotype Machine Company was founded by
Tolbert Lanston in
Washington D.C. in
1887. Lanston had a patented mechanical method of punching out metal types from cold strips of metal which were set (hence
typesetting) into a
matrix for the
printing press. In
1896 Lanston patented the first
hot metal typesetting machine and Monotype issued
Modern Condensed, its first
typeface. The licenses for the Lanston type library have been acquired by
P22, a digital
type foundry based in
Buffalo, New York.
In a search for funding, the company set up a branch in
London in
1897 under the name
Lanston Monotype Corporation Ltd. In
1899 a new factory was built in
Salfords near
Redhill in
Surrey where it has been located for over a century. The company was of sufficient size to justify the construction of its own railway station.
The original Monotype machine used "hot metal" to form individual letters. Thus spelling mistakes could be corrected by adding or removing individual letters. This was particularly useful for "quality" printing - such as books. In contrast the
Linotype machine formed a complete line of type in one bar. Editing these required replacing an entire line (and if the replacement ran on to another line, the rest of the paragraph). But Linotype slugs were easier to handle if moving a complete section of text around a page. This was more useful for "quick" printing - such as newspapers.
The typesetting machines were continually improved in the early years of the
20th century, with a
typewriter style
keyboard for entering the type being introduced in
1906. This arrangement addressed the need to vary the space between words so that all lines were the same length.
The keyboard operator types the copy, each key punching holes in a roll of paper tape that will control the separate caster. A drum on the keyboard indicates to the operator the space required for each line. This information is also punched in the paper. Before fitting the tape to the caster it's turned over so that the first holes read on each line set the width of the variable space. The subsequent holes determine the position of a frame, or die case, that holds the set of matrices for the face being used. Each matrix is a rectangle of copper recessed with the shape of the letter. Once the matrix is positioned over the mould that forms the rest of the piece of type being cast, molten type metal is injected.
Many of the typefaces familiar today were introduced during the first half of the
20th century, such as
Times New Roman and
Goudy. The programme of revivals of old typefaces and the commissioning of new ones was a major part of the typographic renaissance of the period. For much of that century the company ran a
compositor (typesetter operator) training school in London.
In
1936 the company was floated on the
London Stock Exchange and became the
Monotype Corporation Ltd. Later the company was split into three divisions: Monotype International, which manufactured spinning mirror switched laser beam phototypesetters; Monotype Limited, which continued the hot metal machines; and Monotype Typography, which designed and sold typefaces. A research and development department was set up in
Cambridge to isolate it from day to day production issues.
In
1999,
Agfa-Compugraphic acquired the Monotype Corporation, which was renamed
Agfa Monotype. In late
2004, after six years under the Agfa Corporation, the Monotype assets were acquired by
TA Associates, a private equity investment firm based in
Boston. The company was incorporated as
Monotype Imaging, with a focus on the company's traditional core competencies of typography and professional printing.
Monotype was the first company to produce a digital version of the handwritten
Persian script, Persian
Nasta'liq. A Chinese "keyboard" was developed to typeset Chinese characters; it consisted of a book with a stylus. As the pages were turned, the page number was detected electrically and this was combined with the position of the character selected by the stylus on a large grid.
In early 2000, Monotype launched
Fontwise, the first software to audit desktops for licensed and unlicensed (not necessarily illegal) fonts.
In 2006-08-02, Monotype Imaging Inc. announced it has acquired Linotype GmbH, a subsidiary of Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG.
In 2006-09-18, Monotype Imaging Inc. announced it has acquired China Type Design Limited, a typeface design and production company based in Hong Kong. CTDL was responsible for developing
Microsoft JhengHei, the default traditional Chinese interface font for
Windows Vista. The deal also secured an exclusive relationship with Creative Calligraphy Center (CCC), a font production company in
Zhuhai, China, with 30 production specialists.
Divisions
- Monotype Imaging Inc.: Monotype's American headquarter in Woburn, Massachusetts.
- Monotype Imaging Ltd.: Monotype's UK branch in Surrey, England.
- Linotype GmbH: Monotype's European foundry.
- China Type Design Ltd.: A typeface design and production company based in Hong Kong.
- Monotype Imaging K. K.: Monotype's Japanese branch in Tokyo.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Monotype Corporation'.
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