Box 1
Contains 20 Results:
Ands and Ampersands from the first century B.C. to the twentieth A.D, by a designer. New York, The Typophiles, 1936.
"Are Modern Types as Good or Better than the Old?" Typothetae Bulletin, vol. 14, no. 11, 1921 July.
Typescript, 1941 April-May.
This subseries consists of print copies, typescripts, and drafts of speeches given by Frederic W. Goudy and intended for publication. With two exceptions the materials date from the period 1941-1944.
"The Ethics and Aesthetics of Type and Typography". An address delivered at Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, February 12, 1938. In A-D, vol. 8, no. 4, 1942.
This subseries consists of print copies, typescripts, and drafts of speeches given by Frederic W. Goudy and intended for publication. With two exceptions the materials date from the period 1941-1944.
"Initial letters--Their Ethics and Aesthetics", unknown publication, possibly Monotype, 1940.
"Notes on Legibility"; Excerpts from earlier writings and comments on their interpretation; taken from letters to Earl English; published on the occasion of Mr. Goudy's lecture to newspaper men of the state, at the School of Journalism of the State University of Iowa, 1944 November 17.
"Type Design", Journal of the Rutgers University Library, vol. 3, no. 2, 1940 June.
"Type Design for the Scholarly Book". The address given before the Pasadena Library Club Wednesday Evening, October 30, 1940 in Celebration of the Five Hundredth Anniversary of Printing, 1940 October 30.
This subseries consists of print copies, typescripts, and drafts of speeches given by Frederic W. Goudy and intended for publication. With two exceptions the materials date from the period 1941-1944.
"Why Go Modern". Address before the yearly meeting of the Advertising Typographers Association of America at the Cavalier Hotel, Virginia Beach, Virginia, October 4, 1938. New York: Diamant Typographic Service, 1944.
This subseries consists of print copies, typescripts, and drafts of speeches given by Frederic W. Goudy and intended for publication. With two exceptions the materials date from the period 1941-1944.
"Prelum vicanum renascitur: The Village Press Revived". Lecture at the Library of Congress, 1944 January 6.
Manuscript draft of lecture + advance press release from the Library of Congress (2 copies) + copy of letter from Bruce Rogers, Cambridge University Press, 19 January 1919.