The small h
letter in Garamond italic usually bends inward, as the following:
Sometimes it's difficult to distinguish it with b
. Can anyone give some (historical) reason for that?
Answer
The Garamond Roman typography designed by Claude Garamond, is one of the first Roman typefaces designed specifically for the novel printing system of the Middle Ages, expanded throughout Europe. Hence, its design is well studied and adjusted within a modulation, but in essence many of its lines continue to maintain the trait of manual writing of the scribes of the time. No just in the character h, but also the J, R, j, Q...
Garamond Italic designed by Morris Fuller Benton in 1917 (source flickr)
The printing press not only served to print and distribute books, but also to unify all the Latin Nationals lowercase in the only standard Carolingian minuscule, name due to Emperor Charlemagne, the architect of the unification. Until then, the scribes of each European country had their customs about writing and each character differed considerably. Among them the round h.
This image perfectly shows the evolution of the first manual Sweynheym & Pannartz's Romans, practically equal to the calligraphy of the scribes, to the best graphically constructed and adapted to the printing system.
Spira and most of the earliest printers in Venice used a round h (the uncial construction of h) that was more common in the humanistic manuscripts of the time.
We should have in mind that the Garamond we see today has already gone through many processes of redesign, from the "insert into a grid" of the XVIII th century, to Morris Benton's drawings at the beginning of the 20th century, the photographic adaptation of the mid-20th century until reaching the digital age. Even so, many of its essential features are maintained.
Although all the current classic typefaces keep the Carolingian minuscule, some historical like Garamond Font prefer to retain part of these old characteristics as an essence of its origin.
More explanation about Roman evolution here
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