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Western Type Foundry





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Western Type Foundry was founded in 1901 to compete with the conglomerate and near-monopoly, American Type Founders. In 1914 Western purchased the Advance Type FoundryinChicago from Wiebking, Hardinge & Company, though even before this Robert Wiebking did most of the punch-cutting and matrix making for Western. Among the matrices that Wiebking for the foundry were his own designs for Farley, Perry, Artcraft, and Advertisers Gothic, a re-cutting of Caslon, and the original matrices for Bruce Rogers's deservedly famous Centaur typeface. The foundry was closed in 1919, transferring all of its equipment and holdings to Barnhart Brothers & Spindler in 1919.[1]

Western Type Foundry
Company typeDefunct
IndustryType foundry
FoundedSaint Louis, Missouri, United States, 1901
Defunct1919
HeadquartersSaint Louis, Missouri, United States

Key people

Robert Wiebking

Over its lifetime, the foundry issued four specimen books, in 1906, 1909, 1912 and 1917.

The Western Type Foundry is not to be confused with the Great Western Type Foundry which later became Barnhart Brothers & Spindler.

References

edit
  1. ^ Lawson, Alexander, Anatomy of a Typeface, David R. Godine, Publisher, Boston, 1990, ISBN 0-87923-332-X, pp. 68-70.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Western_Type_Foundry&oldid=1045311370"
 



Last edited on 19 September 2021, at 23:06  





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This page was last edited on 19 September 2021, at 23:06 (UTC).

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