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  1. typographica.org › typeface-reviews › jjannonJJannon – Typographica

    Jan 19, 2021 · JJannon. The fonts of Jean Jannon, a.k.a. the would-be Garamond, were underrated by twentieth-century typographers. Type designers, too, had a curious love-hate relationship with Jannon, whose legacy they viewed as a kind of fraud because of the long-standing misattribution of his work to Garamond. Such misunderstandings may explain why so few ...

  2. theessential.design › fonts › j-jannonJJannon

    JJannon’s letters reflect the sense of grandeur and attention to detail that defined the Baroque era. This contemporary version of JJannon highlights this historical saga. Rappo masterfully reinvigorates its distinctive elegance and sharpness by preserving the asymmetrical axis, the small inclined bowl of the “a,” and the detailed cupped ...

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  4. This contemporary version of JJannon highlights this historical saga. Rappo masterfully reinvigorates its distinctive elegance and sharpness by preserving the asymmetrical axis, the small inclined bowl of the “a,” and the detailed cupped serifs from the original drawings. Collection Overview. JJannon. 8 styles.

  5. Designed 1997–2010 and updated in 2014. The current version comprises Jannon Antiqua (for display sizes), Jannon 10 (for smaller text sizes), the intermediate Jannon Text, and Jannon Ornaments. Supports Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic. A previous version included Jannon Text Moderne, with thickened hairlines and a slightly smaller x-height. These branches seem to have been merged into Jannon 10.

  6. Jean Jannon. Jean Jannon. French type designer and punchcutter, 1580-1658, born in Switzerland, who worked at the Estienne printing atelier in Paris before escaping to Sedan, to avoid persecution for his Protestant beliefs. He then worked as a printer for the Calvinist Academy where he began to cut his own letters.

  7. For free fonts, probably EB Garamond. Even industry powerhouse Erik Spiekermann, who is notoriously hard to please, gave it a (backhanded) compliment. Another one worth looking into is Sabon (or its more recent update, Sabon Next). The original Sabon was an achievement for being able to look the same when set by hand, by machine, or via phototype.

  8. JJannon in use. Comes in Text and Display sizes, each in four weights plus italics.

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