On Wed, 11 Sep 2013 13:13:12 +0200, Stephan Stiller <[email protected]> 
wrote:

Your page draws my attention to "ſch". To typeset this as "ſ ch" in circumstances where spacing-out 
(positive tracking; German: "gesperrt") is used for emphasis has always irritated me, but I guess that's just 
how it's mostly been done ... do you have more information on this? How often was the entire "ſch" kept 
together in such circumstances?

I do not know of a single historical example where ſch was kept as one and I 
consider it rather unlikely that one exists. And yes, this aspect of the rules 
is indeed very strange and illogical, but so were a lot of other rules at that 
time.

Historically yes, but in the end, long s was considered restricted to 
blackletter; I think this was even written into the orthographic rules from 
1901.

That’s correct, but that did not seem to stop people from using a long s in 
Antiqua from time to time. There are a lot of post-1901 Antiqua display fonts 
that contain a long s as well as examples from normal text. This very rarely 
happens even today: http://www.trueffelschweinberlin.com

Regards,
Gerrit Ansmann

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