Essonnes

  • Headline Thin
  • Headline Thin Italic
  • Headline Regular
  • Headline Regular Italic
  • Headline Bold
  • Headline Bold Italic
  • Display Light
  • Display Light Italic
  • Display Regular
  • Display Regular Italic
  • Display Bold
  • Display Bold Italic
  • Text Regular
  • Text Regular Italic
  • Text Bold
  • Text Bold Italic

Essonnes Headline Bold Italic

we are the village
THUMB BUSTER

Essonnes Headline Thin

Preservation Society
WITCHCRAFTING

Essonnes Headline Regular

Straight Strychnine
THE 1523 TREATY

Essonnes Display Bold

The types that Didot used are characterized by extreme contrast in thick strokes and thin strokes, by the use of hairline serifs and by the vertical stress of the letters.

Essonnes Display Light Italic

Pierre Didot (son of François-Ambroise Didot) was born in 1760 and died in 1853. Pierre Didot was awarded a gold medal at the exhibition of 1798, for his edition of Virgil.

Essonnes Display Regular

François-Ambroise Didot (son of François Didot) was born in 1730 and died in 1804. François-Ambroise Didot inherited the work of his father François. He was appointed printer to the clergy in 1788.

Essonnes Text Regular

In 1806, Binny & Ronaldson acquired from William Duane some tools and equipment that Benjamin Franklin had purchased from Pierre Simon Fournier in France twenty years earlier. In 1812 the foundry issued the first type specimen book ever produced in the United States. Archibald Binny created a spring lever, which improved the efficiency of type casting. Binny patented three improvements to type-founding: an improved printer's mold, a method of "smoothing or rubbing printers' types", and molds for casting printing types.

Essonnes Text Regular Italic

In 1806, Binny & Ronaldson acquired from William Duane some tools and equipment that Benjamin Franklin had purchased from Pierre Simon Fournier in France twenty years earlier. In 1812 the foundry issued the first type specimen book ever produced in the United States. Archibald Binny created a spring lever, which improved the efficiency of type casting. Binny patented three improvements to type-founding: an improved printer's mold, a method of "smoothing or rubbing printers' types", and molds for casting printing types.

About Essonnes

Typefounding in the 19th century was full of experimentation. Looking through specimen books from various foundries, it seems as though no idea was too crazy for a world which was constantly expanding and an industry that was rapidly growing. It was in this ecosystem that a type founder in Paris made a typeface full of character, exploration, and resourcefulness which became the catalyst for Essonnes. A typeface which sought to redefine establish paradigms (who says a a lowercase g can’t have serifs?) and solve a myriad of problems which plagued earlier designers. Born of a union between Didot experimentation, late Victorian extravagance, and contemporary pragmatism, Essonnes is a type system which brings both the familiarity and creativity of a Didone together with the situational requirements of the 21st century.

Made up of sixteen individual weights and spread over three different optical sizes, Essonnes is designed to bring utility back to the Didot genre. It’s a common belief among designers that Didones don’t work for text. This wasn’t true in 1819 and it isn’t true today. Like its forebearers, Essonnes is a truely optical family—not just a study in adjusting contrast. The text and display weights have been designed from the ground up for their intended roles. This means that everything from the height of the uppercase & lowercase letters have been specifically tuned for their intended purpose.

One of the most recognizable aspects of the 1819 Didot Type was the unique handling of the lowercase g, s, y, and, in the text weights, the C, G, and S—it was these characters that led to the birth of the Essonnes project. For some reason, the type Essonnes references only included these “devil tail” serifs on the uppercase were only available in the text weights. Now, with the possibilities offered by stylistic sets, the designer has the option to utilize an updated version of Didot’s decidedly different take on the Latin script.

Like many typefaces, Essonnes started after falling in love with a piece of history. In this case, it was the eccentric forms of Pierre Didot’s Type and the evolution of the High contrast Didone throughout the 19th century. It was out of curiosity and love for these forms that led to the first draft of what would become Essonnes back in 2011.

These unique situations—screens, modern printing methods, the previous 200 years of typographic innovation since the original design, my own life experiences—have led to a typeface that, while based on history, is not stuck in it.

Read more about Essonnes over at I Love Typography.

OpenType Features

Default
Activated
Small Caps
abcdefgh
abcdefgh
Tabular Numbers
012345
01234 01234
Oldstyle Numbers
012345
012345
Superscript & Subscript
012345
01234567890
Numerator & Denominator
012345
01234567890
Stylistic Set 1
CGScgs
CGScgs
Stylistic Set 2
gsy g
gsy g
Stylistic Set 3
012
012
Stylistic Set 4
VAW vaw
VAW vaw
Capital Height Forms
({HE-LLO})
({HE-LLO})
Contextual Alternates
fäfà
fäfà

Design Notes

Essonnes Headline has slightly narrower uppercase forms than the display and text optical sizes to allow it to sit tighter in all-uppercase settings.
To keep things extra clean, the serifs on the thin strokes of Essonnes Headline have no extra weight. The serifs on the Display sizes have more to help balance the weight of the forms when sizes get slightly smaller.
Essonnes Text has a little notch and some extra weight at the join. This is to re-enforce the vertical stress of the design without making the join too thin.
As in the original Didot type from 1819, Essonnes includes all the unique forms. Unlike the original these are not the default versions.
Essonnes Headline contains a unique Didot style—the zero-contrast Didot. Everything is as thin as the serifs on the rest of the Headline Styles

In Use

  • Current Affairs
  • In House
  • Good Eggs
  • In House

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