The ⟨a⟩ and ⟨b⟩ of the Romain du Roi , showing the bitmap of Truchet points used in their construction.
The Bignon Commission (French : commission Bignon ; 1693–1718) was a group directed by the French minister Colbert to examine the feasibility of compiling a description of all the arts and industrial processes used in France . It was headed by Abbé Bignon , who selected the royal typographer Jacques Jaugeon , the scholar Gilles Filleau des Billettes , and Father Sébastien Truchet to assist him. As part of their participation, the three were named to the Academy by King Louis XIV in 1699.[ 2]
The commission reported that the project would be feasible and began by examining French printing and typography , as the "art by which all others are preserved".[ 3] As part of the project, Jaugeon and Truchet established the first typographic point system,[ 4] vector fonts , the bitmap , slanted italic type,[ n 1] and the Romain du Roi ("King's Roman") font ,[ 5] which later developed into Times New Roman .
In 1710, the work continued under a new chief editor, René Antoine Ferchault de Réaumur .[ 2] The commission was reorganized in 1718, with other groups continuing its work. The release of Diderot and D'Alembert 's Encyclopedia in 1750 led the Academy to finally publish a 73-volume Descriptions of the Arts and Trades but it remains generally unknown.[ 4]
See also
Notes
^ Italic type to this point was cut separately as a similar but distinct font. The Romain du roi had no separate italic font but was italicized mathematically through deforming the axes of its bitmap.[ 5]
References
Citations
Bibliography
André, Jacques; et al. (1999), "Father Truchet, the typographic point, the Romain du roi , and tilings" (PDF) , TUGboat , vol. XX, No. 1, pp. 8–14 .
Porchez, Jean François (2004), "Nationality and Type Design" , Typofonderie .
Sturdy, David J. (1995), Science and Social Status: The Members of the Académie des Sciences, 1666–1750 , Woodbridge: St Edmundsbury Press for the Boydell Press, ISBN 0-85115-395-X .