Historic Woman Printer/Publisher of the Week:
Gudrun Zapf von Hesse (b. 1918)
Yesterday, our little beehive was so busy making honey, we just couldn’t get to posting our usual Typography Tuesday blog. So, we thought we’d take a little diversion in our usual Historic Woman Printer/Publisher post and combine it with Typography Tuesday to focus on the work of the great German typographer, calligrapher, and book binder Gudrun Zapf von Hesse.
Von Hesse worked as a book-binding apprentice, studied the calligraphic work of Rudolf Koch and Edward Johnston, and learned punchcutting at the Bauer Type Foundry in Frankfurt before setting up her own bookbinding shop after WWII. She began working as a type designer for the Stempel Type Foundry in Frankfurt soon after -- where she met and married the prolific German type designer Hermann Zapf -- and continued a long and successful career. Among the several typefaces she designed for Stempel are Diotima, Ariadne, and Smaragd, but she also designed typefaces for other companies, notably Alcuin for URW and Carmina BT for Bitstream.
In 1991, she became the second woman (but not the last) to win the Frederic W. Goudy award. Her husband was the first recipient of this prestigious award in 1969. In honor of her 100th birthday this past January, the Monotype Corporation released the typeface Hesse-Antiqua, which is based on an alphabet she designed in the late 1940s. Happy Birthday Gudrun!!
The images and designs shown here are from another, yet-uncataloged donation from our friend and benefactor Jerry Buff, Gudrun Zapf von Hesse published in 2002 by Mark Batty in West New York, New Jersey, and printed in Von Hesse’s Norfet Roman which was originally designed for the Berthold Type Foundry of Berlin. Our copy is one of 20 copies bound by Judi Conant in Vermont and singed by Von Hesse, including an extra suite of 13 specially-printed specimens, among which are six original, hand-printed specimens signed by Von Hesse.
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