Hannibal

Description

Hannibal

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annibal was the typeface used exclusively in Jim Rimmer’s limited edition of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, which is now the stuff of Canadian book crafts legend.

The original typeface (named after Mark Twain’s hometown in Missouri) was a very basic two-set of a roman and an italic intended for use solely in the making of one private press book. What positioned it uniquely in type lore was its status as the first new face made for the Monotype composition caster in more than a quarter century (since the Gauthiers 11 series cut for the Imprimerie Nationale in 1978), and the only homemade face ever made for said caster. In the twenty-first century, no less!

Hannibal’s forms exhibit a recognizable Jim Rimmer aesthetic with clear deco and mid-century type influences. Similar roots and branches are evident in Albertan, Amethyst, and Rimmer, Jim’s other body copy faces.

A couple of decades after Jim’s book placed itself prominently in the Canadian book arts, we bring its typeface into the mainstream as a workhorse family, including all the bells and whistles of fine typography. This Hannibal family boasts six weights and their italics, each including a full complement of small caps, an extended series of ligatures, plenty of stylistic alternates, five kinds of figures, automatic fractions, and extended support for Latin languages.

For sample settings and detailed information about Hannibal’s features, please see this PDF.

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From $40 USD