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59+ oeuvres 972 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Comprend les noms: Dam Solo, Dan Solo, Dan X Solo

Crédit image: via Identifont

Œuvres de Dan X. Solo

Ornate Letters and Initials (1995) 55 exemplaires
Art Nouveau Typographic Ornaments (1982) 48 exemplaires
Ornamental Initials (1994) 44 exemplaires
100 Calligraphic Alphabets (1997) 20 exemplaires
100 Ornamental Alphabets (1995) 15 exemplaires
Decorative Display Alphabets (1990) 14 exemplaires
Foreign-Language Alphabets (1999) 13 exemplaires
3-D and Shaded Alphabets (1982) 12 exemplaires
24 Script and Cursive Display Fonts CD-ROM and Book (1998) — Concepteur — 11 exemplaires
Ready-to-Use Victorian Alphabets (1986) 8 exemplaires
Easy-to-Duplicate Graph Grids (1993) 4 exemplaires
Ready-to-Use Thematic Alphabets (1988) 3 exemplaires
Ready-to-Use Florid Initials (1998) 3 exemplaires
Ready-to-Use Art Deco Alphabets (1986) 3 exemplaires
Ready-to-Use Decorative Initials (1997) 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Classic Type Faces and How to Use Them: Including 91 Complete Fonts (1970) — Avant-propos, quelques éditions27 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1928
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Professions
printer
radio actor
magician
Courte biographie
The Solotype Archive was begun in 1942 when I was 14. I was a kid printer for several years before that. At 16, after a quick three months of training, I dropped out of school and went to work full time as a radio actor and announcer in San Francisco. (Easy to get jobs in those days, due to the war-induced manpower shortage.) In 1949 and 1950, I created a magic show which played West Coast theatres with some success. After that, back to broadcasting.

By 1962, I was completely burned out on radio, so I decided to see if I could make a living with my collection of antique types, which numbered about a thousand fonts at that time. In 1962, I sent out 4,000 catalogs showing the type to ad agencies all over the U.S. The timing was perfect (no thanks to me) because there was developing at that time a renewed interest in the old types. Business took off immediately.

The Solotype collection was one of four commercial collections at the time, but I seemed to have been more aggressive in marketing than the other chaps. (Well, Morgan Press certainly knew how to market.)

Two years into the business, I began to collect alphabets on paper for conversion to photo lettering, which was just becoming mainstream in the type business. We closed the shop for a month every year and went on a type hunt, mostly in Europe where there didn’t seem to be much competition among collectors. Other typographers couldn’t understand how we could do this, but I believe it made people appreciate the resource we offered even more. Over the years, the collection became quite large. When I closed Solotype a couple of years ago, I got rid of about half the archive (because the fonts were dull, or already digitized, or for a variety of other reasons) leaving me with about 6,000 fonts on paper or film.

In 1974, I began to supply Dover Publications with mechanicals for books of 100 alphabets on a particular theme. I did 30 of these books over the years, and 30 more of printers’ ornaments, borders, and so forth. Sometime in the 1990s, Dover asked me to digitize books of 24 fonts each, to be sold with a disk in the back. I did 12 of these. The Dover relationship came to an end when Haywood Cirker, the owner and my special friend, died and the company was sold to another publisher. Dover felt that they had covered the type field thoroughly.

Now in my old age, my wife and I have a mindreading act that is great fun and good for the ego. Even so, when not traveling, I digitize type for relaxation and enjoyment, but have made no effort to sell it. Until now.

Membres

Critiques

This immediately usable archive of decorative initials contains over 800 different, ornately rendered designs. Assembled by veteran typographer Dan X. Solo, the letters display an astonishing diversity and inventiveness. There are over 40 different versions of the letter "A," for example: bordered by cherubs, in a tableau with a dog and a rabbit, amid frolicking satyrs, set against stylized abstract backgrounds, framing a woman's face, laced with flowers and vines, and in many other clever and attractive representations. The other letters of the alphabet enjoy similar treatment. A wonderfully effective way to draw attention to ads, announcements, bulletins — almost any message — this superb treasury will be welcomed by anyone looking for ways to add pictorial pizzazz to the printed word.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
riselibrary_CSUC | Jun 22, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
59
Aussi par
1
Membres
972
Popularité
#26,498
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
1
ISBN
67

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