At 07:27 AM 11/8/2000 -0800, Lukas Pietsch wrote:

>Gosh, sounds terrible, indeed!
>But *is* polytonic Greek ever actually set in this way? Doesn't sound like a
>very common thing to do. I can't remember having ever seen it.

Insofar as there are _very_ few available Greek typefaces with smallcap
sets, it isn't surprising that Greek is not often seen set this way --
polytonic or monotonic --, but the same typographic, mise en page reasons
for Latin smallcaps also apply for Greek -- and Cyrillic, of course. An
example of Greek smallcaps in use, including the miniature form of the
prosgegrammeni, can be seen in Laurentius de Alopa�s 1496 edition of the
works of Apollonius of Rhodes, reproduced in Scholderer's _Greek Printing
Types_. As the American type designer Frederic Goudy famously quipped, the
old fellows stole all our best ideas; these ideas may, however, have been
neglected in the intervening five hundred years.

John Hudson

Tiro Typeworks     |     
Vancouver, BC      |     All empty souls tend to extreme opinion.
www.tiro.com       |                                       W.B. Yeats
[EMAIL PROTECTED]        |     

Reply via email to