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Stanley Morison Book order






- 2021
- 2021
The Likeness of Thomas More; an Iconographical Survey of Three Centuries
- 142 pages
- 5 hours of reading
- 1997
Letter forms
- 129 pages
- 5 hours of reading
To understand the language and development of type is to know its history. Letter Forms is a collection of essays by and about Stanley Morison, adviser to Monotype, and the greatest type historian of our time. ... For the true student of typography and the fine art of distinguishing between things that differ, the historical insights of Letter Forms will be a source of inspiration and a glimpse into the mind of one of the most gifted typography scholars of this century.
- 1981
Reprint of the 1967 edition with a new introduction by Barker just for this edition. See Appleton 227 . Best book on the subject. vii, xvii , 278, 3 pages. cloth.. folio.
- 1973
A Tally of Types, with Additions by Several Hands
- 150 pages
- 6 hours of reading
The Tally of Types was first circulated in a privately printed edition in 1953, achieving a fame and influence wholly disproportionate to the comparatively small number of copies in existence. In 1973 Cambridge University Press published a version edited and expanded by Brooke Crutchley and others, making this classic of typographical history and practice available to a wider readership; it is this edition we have reprinted here. Stanley Morison provided the impetus and judgement behind the programme of typographical revival carried through by the Monotype Corporation in the 1920s and early 1930s. The Tally is an account, historical, critical and functional, of the types cut under Morison's direction during this period. It is an impressive performance: a fine example of what is now recognised as Morison's characteristic blend of erudition and insight. What started as no more than an attempt to record the facts developed, under his hand, into one of the major statements of typographical practice of its time.
- 1971