Issued by Stephenson Blake in 1905 [Reichardt 2011]. “Revived and recut from an
earlier mid-19th-century version. Restyled from
English No. 20 about 1910, with shortened
descenders. Issued as Modern No. 20 in 1955.” [Millington 2002]
Some retail sources credit Ed Benguiat as a designer, but that
could be confusion with his ITC
Modern No. 216. Photo-Lettering had a phototype version
as Modern Roman No. 20, in four styles (two optical
sizes (?), one Italic, one Condensed), which may have been drawn by
Benguiat. [PLINC One Liner 1971] Letraset offered a
version for dry transfer lettering.
Digital versions include Anna Wheeler’s and Type Solutions’ for
Microsoft More…
Issued by Stephenson Blake in 1905 [Reichardt 2011]. “Revived and recut from an earlier mid-19th-century version. Restyled from English No. 20 about 1910, with shortened descenders. Issued as Modern No. 20 in 1955.” [Millington 2002]
Some retail sources credit Ed Benguiat as a designer, but that could be confusion with his ITC Modern No. 216. Photo-Lettering had a phototype version as Modern Roman No. 20, in four styles (two optical sizes (?), one Italic, one Condensed), which may have been drawn by Benguiat. [PLINC One Liner 1971] Letraset offered a version for dry transfer lettering.
Digital versions include Anna Wheeler’s and Type Solutions’ for Microsoft (1993) and Bitstream.