Potsdam (font)

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Font sample: Potsdam
Stock of characters: Potsdam

The Potsdam font was developed in 1934 by Robert Golpon for the JD Trennert & Sohn type foundry in Hamburg.

Like the Tannenberg, the Potsdam belongs to the Broken Grotesk family , also known as Fraktur-Grotesk or Schlichte Gothic. Polemically, it is also referred to as "grotesque high boots". The grotesque form of broken fonts emerged in Germany in the 1930s.

Potsdam is a commercial typeface and was used for the labeling of signs, e.g. B. Station signs, posters and information boards are used.

more details

The type foundry CE Weber took over the Potsdam narrow half-bold font under the name "Staufia".

The four sections of Potsdam were the only realized writings of Robert Golpon.

Today there are various digitizations of the font, but often they do not contain any ligatures or the " long s ".

Font name First casting designer Type foundry
Potsdam
1934
Robert Golpon JD Trennert & Sohn, Hamburg
Potsdam half bold
1934
Robert Golpon JD Trennert & Sohn, Hamburg
Potsdam bold
1934
Robert Golpon JD Trennert & Sohn, Hamburg
Potsdam narrow half-bold
1934
Robert Golpon JD Trennert & Sohn, Hamburg
Potsdam narrow half-fat (Staufia)
1934
Robert Golpon CE Weber, Stuttgart

Individual evidence

  1. Robert Golpon ( PDF , ≈ 69 kB) - Klingspor-Museum , (last published or uploaded there) on June 12, 2016