A drop cap font for Garamontio

michele casanova
Posts: 32
I tried to create a drop cap font under the name Garamontio Capo (github and details), since I called Garamontio a fork of EB Garamond.
As a starting point I used the drop caps indicated as Reinassance-Initialen in Petzendorfer's Schriften Atlas, but I made some changes (especially to the letters G, M, P, Q, R) because the look of some letters seemed typically 19th century to me.

Do you think this is an acceptable compromise? Or are other changes needed to make the two fonts match?

I'm currently considering modifying the letter W (although there would be problems with the background decorations).

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Comments
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I'm impressed by the quality of your backgrounds and the way they match your letters. But I find the /I/ background less convincing, not matching (filling) the square pattern as the others do. Anyway, bravo!0
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I think the /I is fine, but wish that the /H could be made a little wider. It looks pinched compared to the other letters.1
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Yves Michel said:I'm impressed by the quality of your backgrounds and the way they match your letters. But I find the /I/ background less convincing, not matching (filling) the square pattern as the others do. Anyway, bravo!John Hudson said:I think the /I is fine, but wish that the /H could be made a little wider. It looks pinched compared to the other letters.
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Congradulations on this revival. It looks very nice.0
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C.Fransen said:Congradulations on this revival. It looks very nice.
Thanks. It's not a completely faithful revival of the original, since I changed the shape of a few letters
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John Hudson said:I think the /I is fine, but wish that the /H could be made a little wider. It looks pinched compared to the other letters.
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Many letters don't look particularly Garamond to me (e.g., /R/, /S/). Why not start with the shapes of your regular caps?1
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Christian Thalmann said:Many letters don't look particularly Garamond to me (e.g., /R/, /S/). Why not start with the shapes of your regular caps?0
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michele casanova said:C.Fransen said:Congradulations on this revival. It looks very nice.
Thanks. It's not a completely faithful revival of the original, since I changed the shape of a few letters0 -
To expand on Christian’s comment, despite the name in that catalog, these caps might not feel entirely Renaissance or Garamond-adjacent because of their relatively modern proportions. Making them fit within optically the same amount of border within a square “evens out” the letter widths compared to Renaissance (and classical Roman) proportions. That makes certain letters much narrower than in Renaissance types (CDGHMOQW) and others wider (EFJS).
I haven’t spent a ton of time considering this sort of thing in illuminated manuscripts or period drop caps, but Ito the extent that I have, I have seen both approaches in period illuminated/floriated initial caps within square blocks; some make all the caps optically about the same width, others just allow more space. Jim Moran gave a talk on wood type initial caps at TypeCon in 2018, and I believe I recall seeing both approaches at the time.
Personally, if you are going with the main letterform being more traditional/typographic, I would love to see them closer to old-style proportions. If the letterforms themselves were more ornamented, then I wouldn’t care so much.
See for example this image (from the Steven Heller article in Design Observer at https://designobserver.com/initial-caps-the-birth-of-illustrated-typography/).
The O V and X are more ornamented, while the R and S are more typographic, in the sense that I mean.3 -
@Thomas Phinney Thanks for the directions. Combining these with @Christian Thalmann's, I'm considering changing the starting point for the drop caps.Do you think using Geoffroy Tory's drop caps would be a good choice?The original alphabet is not complete, as I found less than twenty letters.However, between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century, the missing letters were created for the "Nouveau Larousse illustré".Edit: a simple test0
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