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Bruce Rogers

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Bruce Rogers and Monotype Centaur

Bruce RogersWere it not for the Centaur® typeface, Bruce Rogers would be remembered as one of America’s great book designers. Consider the Centaur design, however, and Rogers earns his place in the ranks of America’s great typeface designers as well.

Born in Indiana in 1870, the son of a baker, Rogers’s first experience with type was the set of wooden alphabet blocks he was given to play with as a child. “I fear I didn’t do much with them except to build houses and forts,” he wrote later, “though I may possibly have learned the alphabet at the same time.” When he was 12, a cousin gave Rogers a copy of John Ruskin’s Elements of Drawing. It was then, Rogers recalled, that “I became aware of letters as something more that mere units in a word.”

Rogers showed early academic and artistic prowess and entered Purdue University at 16 as one of two male students in the school’s relatively undistinguished art department. There he learned the basics of graphic design and lettering and even contributed designs for Purdue’s first yearbook in 1889. Always modest, Rogers claimed these designs “were surely about as bad as they could get.”

After graduating from Purdue, Rogers worked in Indianapolis for the quarterly Modern Art. When the publication moved to Boston in 1895, Rogers followed. He had only been there a short time when Houghton Mifflin and Co. hired him to work at the Riverside Press.

While in Boston, Rogers saw a copy of Nicholas Jenson’s 1470 Eusebius in an exhibition at the Boston Public Library. This prized incunable is generally regarded as one of the best examples of Jenson’s type in use. Rogers was so fascinated with the design that he hunted down the owner of the book to see if he could get a better look. The owner agreed, and even invited Rogers to his home to photograph a page from the book. (Rogers eventually acquired a copy of the Eusebius for himself.)

Rogers’s first typeface design (a font for Houghton Mifflin) was based on this photograph, but he wasn’t entirely pleased with the results. “The first proofs of the type were faintly disappointing to me,” he wrote, “...but Mr. Mifflin was delighted with the new type, and after several of the least successful letters were recut I decided it would have to do – for the time, at least – until I could have another try for my ideal type.”

A Second Attempt
Ten years later, Rogers finally had another try. By this time he had moved to New York and was working as a freelance designer.

For his second attempt at drawing a typeface based on the Eusebius types, he used enlarged copies of his photo prints as the basis for the design. Rogers wrote over the large lowercase characters repeatedly with a broad pen until he was satisfied that his hand, eye, and brain were familiar with the forms. Only then did he draw the letters on white paper.

These, and the capitals which he rendered more carefully, were the drawings Rogers sent to Robert Wiebking, the Chicago engraver and type designer (Rogers trusted Wiebking to craft the forms based on the intent of his drawings, without needing exact renderings). The completed fonts were cast in 14 point by The American Type Founders Company and were first used to set a translation of De Guerin’s Le Centaure. Following typographic tradition, Rogers named his typeface after the book in which it first appeared.

The Centaur design was later issued in several other sizes and used exclusively for the New York Metropolitan Museum Press. Soon, fine printers made so many requests for the Centaur types that Rogers considered developing a commercial version of the face.

Commercial Release
In 1928, Rogers finally decided to take on the project. He provided Monotype with new drawings specifically for the company’s typesetting machines. Now living in London, Rogers also served as design director, personally editing the proofs of the various font sizes. The process took almost a year, and the new fonts were first used to set The Trained Printer and the Amateur in 1929. The most famous use for the type, however, came six years later when a special 22-point size was cast to set the 1,238-page Oxford Lectern Bible.

Both of Rogers’s earlier versions of the Centaur typeface were roman-only designs, but at Rogers’s request, the Monotype version added an italic based on drawings by Frederic Warde. Warde’s italic is an interpretation of the work of the 16th century printer and calligrapher, Ludovico degli Arrighi.

In the 1990s, Monotype produced digital fonts based on the original drawings of Rogers and Warde, adding new bold and bold italic weights and a suite of alternate and swash characters. The Centaur type continues to be generally acclaimed as the best revival of Nicolas Jenson’s original design – a true Monotype masterwork.

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