---
url: /design-history/type-classification/
title: "Type Classification | Vox-ATypI, DIN 16518, BS 2961 | TGDS"
template: design-history-movement
priority: 3
wordCount: 1994
lastModified: 2026-06-22T06:00:33.835Z
category: pages
site: "The Graphic Design School"
tokenCount: 3031
---

# Type Classification | Vox-ATypI, DIN 16518, BS 2961 | TGDS

Design history · Origins of print Type classification A century of systems for sorting ten thousand typefaces — from Thibaudeau to Bringhurst. Type classification is the set of taxonomic systems developed across the 20th century to organise typefaces by historical period and morphological characteristic. From Thibaudeau's 1921 four-family schema through the Vox-ATypI standard (1962), DIN 16518 (1964) and BS 2961 (1967), to Bringhurst's art-historical framing (1992), classification gave typography a shared vocabulary — and remains the foundation of type teaching today. ATF Garamond specimen (American Type Founders, 1923). Foundry specimen books were the primary distribution channel for typefaces before digital catalogues — and the practical context in which classification systems first proved useful. · American Type Founders — Wikimedia Commons (public domain) Key facts Domain Typeface taxonomy — historical + morphological classification systems Key systems Thibaudeau (1921) · Vox (1954) · Vox-ATypI (1962) · DIN 16518 (1964) · BS 2961 (1967) · Bringhurst (1992) Categories Humanes · Garaldes · Réales · Didones · Mécanes · Linéales · Incises · Scriptes · Manuaires · Fractures Key figures Francis Thibaudeau · Maximilien Vox · Robert Bringhurst · ATypI Adjacent Typography pedagogy · Type design · Foundry catalogs · Library cataloguing Key works & examples Jenson roman (Eusebius) 1470 Nicolas Jenson cut this roman type for his Venice printing house in 1470. Based on the humanist manuscript hand used by Florentine scholars, it shows moderate stroke contrast, diagonal stress, and bracketed serifs — the defining features of what Vox would later call Humanes, the oldest of the historical serif classes. Every classification system from Thibaudeau to Bringhurst places Jenson-model faces at the beginning because they preserve the clearest trace of the pen. Eusebius, *De evangelica praeparatione*, Nicolas Jenson, Venice, 1470. The first fully resolved roman type — the Humanes model every classification system places first. · SMU Bridwell Library — via Wikimedia Commons (public domain) · Public domain Garamond specimen 1530 Claude Garamond refined Jenson's humanist roman for the Paris book trade around 1530. Where Jenson hews close to the scribe's pen, Garamond sharpens the construction without losing warmth. The result is what Vox named Garaldes — the Garamond-Aldus class — a group that has remained the workhorse of book typography for five centuries. The ATF 1923 cutting shown here was one of dozens of 20th-century revivals that kept the classification category alive and commercially relevant. ATF Garamond specimen (American Type Founders, 1923) — a 20th-century cutting of Claude Garamond's 16th-century Parisian roman. Garaldes in Vox; Old Style in the English-language tradition. · American Type Founders — Wikimedia Commons (public domain) · Public domain Baskerville specimen 1757 John Baskerville printed this specimen in Birmingham in 1757 to accompany his edition of Virgil. The type shows increased contrast between thick and thin strokes, near-vertical stress, and finer serifs than any earlier roman — without abandoning organic variation entirely. Vox placed faces like this in Reales, from the French real meaning royal, acknowledging their 18th-century courtly patronage. Baskerville's innovations were absorbed into the mainstream slowly; his type was more admired abroad, especially in France and Italy, than at home during his lifetime. John Baskerville type specimen, Birmingham, 1757. The Reales class in Vox — Transitional in the anglophone tradition — sits between Old Style warmth and Didone precision. · James Puckett / Dunwich Type — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0) · CC BY Bodoni / Didot specimens 1790 Giambattista Bodoni in Parma and Firmin Didot in Paris developed what the Vox system calls Didones in the closing decades of the 18th century. The two designers worked independently but arrived at the same formal resolution: stroke contrast pushed to its extreme, hairline unbracketed serifs, and an axis so vertical it is functionally mechanical. Vox named the class after both founders. Where earlier classification writers had simply called these Modern romans, the Didone label gives the group a more precise historical address and distinguishes it clearly from the Reales that precede it. Intertype Bodoni specimen. Bodoni and Didot, working independently in Parma and Paris in the 1780s-1790s, produced the Didone class: maximum stroke contrast, hairline serifs, strictly vertical stress. · James Puckett / Dunwich Type — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0) · CC BY Clarendon specimen 1845 Robert Besley registered Clarendon with the Fann Street Foundry in London in 1845 — the first typeface to receive legal protection under the Ornamental Designs Act of 1842. It is the canonical example of what Vox called Mecanes: heavy slab serifs with low stroke contrast, squared serifs of similar weight to the main strokes, and sturdy forms built for high-speed industrial printing. As a classification category, Mecanes marks the first typographic form generated by industrial demand rather than calligraphic tradition. Clarendon Bold type specimen (Craw Clarendon variant). Clarendon was registered by Robert Besley, Fann Street Foundry, London, 1845 — the first legally protected typeface design in Britain; the defining Mecanes exemplar. · James Puckett / Dunwich Type — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0) · CC BY Akzidenz-Grotesk specimen 1898 The Berthold Type Foundry issued Akzidenz-Grotesk in Berlin in 1898, marketed as a workhorse commercial typeface rather than an artistic proposition. Sans-serif forms had existed since the 1810s but Akzidenz was the first to achieve wide commercial adoption. Vox classified such faces as Lineales — the class of type without serifs. Within Lineales, Akzidenz and its relatives sit in the Grotesque subclass: optically corrected, modestly varying stroke widths, and none of the geometric purity that would come with the next century. Helvetica and Univers are its direct descendants. Akzidenz-Grotesk type specimen, Berthold Type Foundry, Berlin, 1898. The Lineales grotesque class — sans-serif at industrial scale, 50 years before Helvetica standardised the form. · James Puckett / Dunwich Type — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0) · CC BY Futura specimen 1927 Paul Renner designed Futura for the Bauer Type Foundry in Frankfurt, released in 1927. Unlike the Grotesque Lineales that preceded it, Futura is constructed from geometric primitives — the O is a near-perfect circle, the a is a single-story form, all strokes tend toward uniform weight. Vox placed such faces in the Geometric sub-class of Lineales. The approach was inseparable from the Bauhaus ethos of the period: reduce form to its underlying geometry and the result will be both modern and universal. Futura remains in continuous production and is still one of the most-used display typefaces worldwide. Futura specimen sheet, De Pinda Fashion — period commercial use of Paul Renner's 1927 Bauer typeface. Geometric Lineales: type reduced to primary geometric forms, without calligraphic reference. · Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0) · CC BY-SA Gill Sans specimen 1928 Eric Gill drew Gill Sans for the Monotype Corporation in 1928, one year after Futura. Where Futura eliminates calligraphic reference, Gill Sans keeps it: the strokes vary in weight, the proportions track the classical roman, and the lowercase follows Edward Johnston's earlier humanist sans design for the London Underground. Vox grouped such faces as Humanist Lineales — the third sub-class of Lineales, alongside Grotesque and Geometric. The Humanist category is the one most associated with warmth and legibility in body text; faces like Gill Sans, Optima, and Frutiger all cluster here. Gill Sans specimen sheet (Eric Gill for Monotype, 1928). Humanist Lineales — sans-serif letters that preserve the proportions and stroke variation of the roman writing tradition. · James Puckett — Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0) · CC BY 01 A century of sorting ten thousand typefaces For over a century, designers have grappled with a deceptively simple question: how do you organise ten thousand typefaces? From French printers to international standards bodies, the attempt to classify typography has produced competing systems that reveal as much about design philosophy as they do about letterforms. These taxonomies — Thibaudeau’s foundry-driven schema, Vox’s art-historical framework, and the national standards that followed — remain the foundation of how we teach type today. 02 The problem classification solves Before systematic classification, typeface selection was an intuitive, often ad hoc process. Printers knew their own foundry catalogues intimately, but comparing faces across foundries or communicating about type required a shared vocabulary that didn’t yet exist. Thibaudeau’s 1921 system addressed this by organising faces into broad families based on visible characteristics — serif shape, stroke contrast, and stress axis — making type legible and comparable at a glance. As the 20th century accelerated, Vox’s historical-stylistic expansion (1954) added cultural and temporal context, and subsequent standards (DIN 16518, BS 2961) brought international order to type libraries and printing industries. Classification transformed type from a craft mystery into a teachable discipline. 03 Walking the Vox-ATypI system The Vox-ATypI system — adopted by the Association Typographique Internationale in 1962 — remains the closest thing to a global standard. It organises typefaces into classes defined by historical period and shared morphological characteristics. Humanes (humanist serifs, after Jenson, c. 1470) carry the closest trace of the pen: diagonal stress, moderate contrast, bracketed serifs. Garaldes (after Garamond and Aldus) refine the humanist roman for the Paris book trade and underpin five centuries of book typography. Reales (after Baskerville) increase contrast and tighten the axis without fully abandoning calligraphic warmth. Didones (after Bodoni and Didot) push contrast to its extreme, arriving at a form that reads as mechanical rather than penned. The industrial 19th century adds Mecanes — slab-serif faces built for high-speed printing — and the three branches of Lineales: Grotesque (Akzidenz-Grotesk, Helvetica), Geometric (Futura), and Humanist (Gill Sans, Frutiger). Beyond these core classes, the system extends to Incises (inscriptional), Scriptes (script), Manuaires (handwritten), and Fractures (blackletter), giving a framework that accounts for the full range of Latin typography from antiquity to the early digital age. 04 Limitations and modern alternatives Despite their educational value, formal classification systems have proven brittle against digital proliferation and hybrid design. A typeface like Scala (1991) or FF Tisa (2009) — faces that blend Old Style serifs with Modernist construction — resists easy placement in any single Vox-ATypI family without significant qualification. Contemporary type foundries like Linotype and Adobe supplement formal schemas with tag-based systems (serif, sans, slab, geometric, humanist, display) that reflect user behaviour and search rather than historical lineage. Variable fonts and parametric type design further complicate fixed categories: a single variable font file can occupy multiple classification positions depending on where you set the weight or optical-size axis. Today, classification systems function as historical lenses and teaching frameworks rather than authoritative taxonomies. Practitioners use them to diagnose visual characteristics and understand type’s cultural heritage. For discovery and selection, digital tools and foundry metadata have become the primary mechanism. Learn at TGDS Type classification is one of the first things we teach — not as rote memorisation, but as a way of seeing. Understanding why Baskerville sits between Garamond and Bodoni trains the eye to read contrast, axis and serif geometry across any typeface, historical or contemporary. Courses Certificate IV in Design (CUA40725) — our flagship qualification. Typography modules include typeface selection, classification, and pairing from first principles. Intensive Foundation Course — 11 modules covering typography, layout and image-making. Certificate of completion, not the Cert IV. Related movements & people Movable-type revolution — the 15th-century print system that produced the first roman types now embedded in the Humanes and Garaldes classes. Further reading Books Robert Bringhurst, The Elements of Typographic Style (Hartley & Marks, 1992; revised 2004, 2012). The art-historical framing of type classification that reshaped North American typography education. Maximilien Vox, Nouvelle classification des caracteres (Estienne, 1954). The primary expanded schema; out of print but well documented in facsimile. Alexander Lawson, Anatomy of a Typeface (David R. Godine, 1990). A detailed walk through the historical classes with specimen analysis. Online Fonts In Use — real-world type application indexed by typeface, industry and classification. Useful for seeing how the historical classes perform in contemporary work. ATypI — Association Typographique Internationale — the body that adopted the Vox system in 1962 and maintains the international classification standard. Letterform Archive — San Francisco collection of type specimens, foundry catalogues and type history primary sources.
