Savage New Lower Case

&[ ]aeoe'je thin( )?!; fl
 bcd isf g  ff
  fi
ffilmnh oyp,wenem
ffl
zvu    t    space    a    r q:quads
x.-

This English lay is that of Savage: Dictionary of the Art of Printing (1841, reprinted Thoemmes 1998), as being the present (ie 1841) arrangement of the types. The long s has been discarded, so the f box is enlarged, and the long s ligature boxes become empty. Johnson: Typographia (1824) has a very similar New Lower lay, but with mids in place of thins, and thins and hairs in some of the empty boxes. Tomlinson: Cyclopaedia of Useful Arts (1853) is the same as Savage, but with the boxes next to fl ff fi containg a 3 piece brace. There is a very similar Bookwork Lower lay, given by Southward: Practical Printing (1882), with thins in the same box as Savage, but with -- & and hair as Johnson, and ... added between ; and fl. Note the position of q in all these lays, and that the letter k is still stored in the Upper case.

The companion upper is the Savage New lay and the empty case configuration is the English Lower.

Other empty cases
ie with the boxes left blank
Other type layouts
ie with characters assigned to boxes
Full Index of layoutsGlossary of terms usedSources of the layoutsIntroduction
Quantities in a fount of typeQuantities in a case of type
Notes about Job
and Double Cases
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This page was written in 1998 by David Bolton and last updated 16 April 2009.