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American Uncial™ Font Family

- by Victor Hammer
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American Uncial™ Regular (Assorted Collection)
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See below American Uncial™ Font Family or other typefaces from the in real usage ...

Source:
Wiener Beisel
Fonts shown:
Fette Fraktur™ Font Family, American Uncial™ Font Family

Documents referring to these items ...

Victor Hammer – born 9. 12. 1882 in Vienna, Austria, died 10. 7. 1967 in Lexington, USA – printer, painter, graphic artist, architect, type designer, sculptor, teacher, publisher. 1897: apprenticeship with an architect and town planner. 1898: studies at the art academy in Vienna. 1922: moves to Florence. Opens and runs a printing workshop in Florence. 1923: makes the acquaintance of Rudolf Koch. 1929: he and his printing works move into the Villa Santuccio in Florence and the business is [...]
The French designer Thierry Pulfoulhoux (born 1961) created the font ITC Korigan™ in 1997. ITC Korigan is uncial typeface which he wanted to offer as an alternative to Victor Hammer's American Unicial™, which remains for him "the uncial character of reference." The roundness of an uncial gives it the look of pearls on a string, as Hammer said, and ITC Korigan is true to its heritage in this respect. Despite the roundness, however, the forms remain familiar and legible to the modern eye.

Other families by this designer ...

About American Uncial™ Font Family ...

Linotype usage sample for
Designer: Victor Hammer, 1953
The American Uncial™ Font Family is part of the Assorted Collection.
The Austrian designer Victor Hammer (1882-1967) created the American Uncial typeface while he was living in the United States during the 1940s. This typeface is similar to Neue Hammer Unziale, although Neue Hammer Unziale is actually a later re-release of this design.

American Uncial is a unicase design. The upper and lowercase letters have the same design, and are the same size.

Victor Hammer released his first Uncial-style typeface with the Klingspor Foundry in Germany in 1923. This was called "Hammerschrift." During the 1930s, he moved to the United States, where American Uncial would be released, through the Dearborn Type Foundry. In 1953, the Victor Hammer released another version of American Uncial with his old distributor, the Klingspor Foundry. They renamed the type Neue Hammer Unziale. Neue Hammer Unziale is not unicase; it has Roman uppercase letters as well as lowercase Uncials. Linotype also has this typeface available; its Neue Hammer Unziale comes in two versions, each with a slightly different Lowercase (Neue Hammer Unziale II is basically the lowercase letters of American Uncial with the uppercase from Neue Hammer Unziale I).

The Uncial letterform was used across Europe during the time of the late Roman Empire, and thereafter as well. Its forms would inspire the Carolingian Miniscule (c. 800 A.D.), and our present lowercase. American Uncial is one of the most popular Uncial fonts in the world. It is often seen in Ireland and elsewhere for things that should look "Irish" or "Celtic." It is also a favorite for use on certificates and diplomas. The font is best used in headlines and shorter texts with a point size of 12 or larger.
Be inspired by this product! Find it and others in the inspirations section: Blackletter Fonts.

Uncial is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.

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Page last edited: 2007-01-08