Yikes. I always knew there were sketchy ties between the Stempel type foundry and the Nazis, but I never realized it was such an explicit, marketed connection until I saw this page from a type specimen booklet for Tannenberg (c.1935) where they promote the larger wood type sizes by showing a poster for a speech by Joesph Goebbels and torch-light procession of Nazi stormtroopers. The photo of the poster is also credited to Hitler’s official photographer, Heinrich Hoffmann.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/nicksherman/53033981172/
@armstrong @kupfers @letterror
Time to retract the claim that type is in itself innocent and only its uses, intentions and the historical context make for the political connotation of a particular typeface?
With those ›Schaftstiefelgrotesk‹ faces (other than Tannenberg: National, Deutschland, Deutschmeister, Element, …) it has more or less always been clear that those are the only real and fully intentional Nazi typefaces…
@nicksherman will you put that scan to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tannenberg_%28typeface%29 as well?
@type @armstrong @kupfers @letterror @nicksherman i wonder though, would these typefaces not have been made in germany at this point regardless of whether the nazis came to power or not? they seem like the logical next step in modernization of germanic blackletter.
@kupfers @type @armstrong @letterror @nicksherman an interesting counter. though liberals vs nazis/conservatives isn’t really an accurate representation of what was happening culturally at that point as i understand it. for example the more staunchly catholic an area was, the less support for nazis, etc.
@sabbatical @kupfers @armstrong @letterror @nicksherman I came to think about this as two alphabets being available to a population. Some may be attributing a special meaning to their choice between the two, others may just be using any one.
Cf. Mistral or OCR-B being used for signage for computer shops, florists or hairdressers without any serious distinction...
The blackletter antiqua debate goes back to the late 18th century, so "tradition" is also on all sides!
@kupfers @type @armstrong @letterror @nicksherman in any society i think there will be those who value traditional aesthetics regardless of political leaning. my grandma goldberg’s documents from her definitely non-nazi german settlement here in ontario around that time were done in blackletter too.