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    <title>Industria Gravur in use</title>
    <link>https://www.fontsinuse.com/typefaces/45006/industria-gravur</link>
    <description>Industria Gravur in use. An inline style added in 1920 to the Industria series started in 1910 at Gursch. In 1917, the foundry was acquired by Berthold. Also sold by Warnery as  Ronsard Cristal and by Idźkowski as Baccarat podwójny. [Reichardt 2011].

VGC’s film type version is named Ronsard Crystal. Digital versions include OPTI Ronsard Crystal (Castcraft, 1990–1991, used for the sample), Ronsard Crystal (Red Rooster, 2009, based on VGC’s film type version), and K22 Ronsard Inline (by Toto G., 2014, based on a showing in Dan X. Solo’s Moderne Alphabets: 100 Complete Fonts).</description>
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    <copyright>Copyright 2026 , FontsInUse.com LLC</copyright>
    <pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2026 05:46:12 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[Gebr. Müller Luckenwalde letterhead, 1930]]></title>
      <link>https://www.fontsinuse.com/uses/15468/gebr-mueller-luckenwalde-letterhead-1930</link>
      <description><![CDATA[Contributed by <a href="/contributors/12/florian-hardwig">Florian Hardwig</a><br/><a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/uses/15468/gebr-mueller-luckenwalde-letterhead-1930"><img src="https://assets.fontsinuse.com/use-media/47402/upto-700xauto/69b51975/1/jpeg/Gebr-Mu%CC%88ller-Luckenwalde-Industria-Gravur.jpeg"/></a><br/><br/><i><span><span class="fiu-attribution__is-own">Photo:&nbsp;<a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/contributors/12/florian-hardwig">Florian Hardwig</a></span>. </span><span>License: <span class="fiu-attribution__license">All Rights Reserved</span><span>. </span></span></i><br/><a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/typefaces/45006/industria-gravur"><img src="https://assets.fontsinuse.com/static/samples/4/3234/440/4/586a6b60/industria-gravur.png"/></a><br/><a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/typefaces/76/akzidenz-grotesk"><img src="https://assets.fontsinuse.com/static/samples/1/894/440/4/570e2072/akzidenz-grotesk.png"/></a><br/><br/><p>The subject of this episode of the <a href="https://fontsinuse.com/sets/2720/weekly-invoice">Weekly Invoice series</a> is technically not a proper invoice, but an order confirmation. It was sent in 1930 (although the form was apparently printed already in the 1920s) by Gebr. Müller, a metal turnery workshop fabricating screws and valves in Luckenwalde, Brandenburg. Established <a href="http://www.luckenwalde.kutte13.de/Luckenwalde/Historie/historie.html">in 1911</a>, the factory was nationalized as <a href="http://www.recherche.im.blha.de/detail.aspx?ID=1031677">VEB Armaturen- und Metallschraubenfabrik</a> after WWII.</p>

<p>We’ve seen some <a href="https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/45005/industria-gursch">Industria</a> before. This wide grotesque was designed by Hermann Zehnpfundt and first cast by the Emil Gursch foundry in Berlin in 1910 in two weights, mager and halbfett. In 1913, two more weights (zart, fett) and the vertically hatched Industria Zephyr were added. After Gursch was acquired by Berthold in 1917, the series was extended with a fifth weight, schwer (1922), and an inline style (1920). The latter, dubbed <a href="https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/45006/industria-gravur"><strong>Industria Gravur</strong></a>, is the leading actor in this letterhead. It is also the only style of the series that outlived the era of metal type. VGC made a film type version named Ronsard Crystal, using the name of the <a href="https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/45008/ronsard">copy by Fonderie Warnery</a> in Paris. Digitizations include OPTI Ronsard Crystal (Castcraft, 1990–1991), <a href="https://fontsinuse.com/typefaces/5986/ronsard-crystal">Ronsard Crystal</a> (Red Rooster, 2009, based on VGC’s version), and K22 Ronsard Inline (Toto G., 2014).</p>

<p>One detail that can only be found in the metal original is the different treatment of some glyphs in smaller sizes. The punchcutter realized that three inlined strokes within the x-height would look too crowded. Reducing their stroke weight would lead to uncontrolled  ink spread and clogged inlines. The problem was solved by embracing it: The middle horizontal tapers into a plain solid stroke, see ‘a’, ‘e’, ‘s’ in the close-up below.</p><br/><a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/uses/15468/gebr-mueller-luckenwalde-letterhead-1930"><img src="https://assets.fontsinuse.com/use-media/47403/upto-700xauto/69b51975/1/jpeg/Gebr-Mu%CC%88ller-Luckenwalde-Industria-Gravur-detail.jpeg"/></a><br/><br/><i><span><span class="fiu-attribution__is-own">Photo:&nbsp;<a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/contributors/12/florian-hardwig">Florian Hardwig</a></span>. </span><span>License: <span class="fiu-attribution__license">All Rights Reserved</span><span>. </span></span></i><br/><br/>This post was originally published at <a href="https://www.fontsinuse.com/uses/15468/gebr-mueller-luckenwalde-letterhead-1930">Fonts In Use</a><hr/>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Sun, 15 Jan 2017 22:14:06 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>Florian Hardwig</author>
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