gbw@list.guildofbookworkers.org

The email list for Guild of Book Workers member communications.

View all threads

UK Letterforms conference with ONLINE option (September)

AM
Anne McLain
Tue, Jul 15, 2025 2:27 PM

The Craft, Texture, and Aesthetics of Letter Forms from Antiquity to the
Present Venue: University of Cambridge, Faculty of English 2nd to 4th
September 2025 Co-hosted by the Faculty of English, University of
Cambridge; Stanford Text Technologies, Stanford University, and The
University Library Research Institute
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/events/lettering/index.htm
conference page

Detailed Program Schedule and Registration link
https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/events/lettering/programme.html

‘The Craft, Texture, and Aesthetics of Letter Forms’ will bring together
scholars, practitioners and heritage experts to explore the matter of
lettering, its practice and study. By marrying a range of disciplinary and
professional approaches, we hope to recover the aesthetic, historical, and
material significance of letter formation in all its rich variety. We will
do this across all material supports – whether stone, vellum, paper, metal
or wood – and across media ranging from letters inked, engraved and
incised, to those freshly pixelated for our computer screens. In the
process, we aim to treat letter forms holistically, as phenomena that
migrate dynamically between different times, different cultures, different
media, different professions, and ultimately different disciplines.

This event seeks to broaden that emphasis in the study of letter forms,
examining not only the historical but also the aesthetic qualities of
letter forms and the evolving knowledge they convey. By engaging experts
from various backgrounds, the conference intends to foster conversations
that blend academic research with practitioner insights, bridging the gap
between scholarly study and hands-on practice in lettering. This event is
an opportunity to develop perspectives that speak both to other fields and
to other sides of the subject. For instance, a purely descriptive focus can
miss the aesthetic character of letter forms and the kinds of tacit
knowledge that they elaborate. Equally, the supposed decline of handwriting
in the digital age raises questions about what forms of awareness –
cognitive, tactile, stylistic – might be being lost to our ‘hands ’even as
we type.

Alongside these visible and material contexts, we are equally interested in
probing the invisible manifestations of letters’ form and texture. What
happens, for instance, when we think about the idea of a letter that exists
beyond any single manifestation; and how might we cognise the character of
words constructed from radio waves or the data of binary code?

The event will focus on bringing together practitioners and academic
participants. All sessions will be plenary. Places are limited to allow us
to cover catering and registration costs for speakers.

Practitioners will include:

  • Tom Frith-Powell (Master Papermaker, the Paper Foundation)
  • The Cardozo Kindersley Workshop (Lida Lopes Cardozo Kindersley MBE and
    Roxanne Kindersley)
  • Riccardo Olocco (typeface designer)
  • Humphrey Stone (typographer and book designer)
  • Sebastian Carter (fine printer and paper artist)
  • Patricia Lovett MBE (scribe and illuminator)
  • Susan Hufton (calligrapher and weaver)

Register your place
https://onlinesales.admin.cam.ac.uk/conferences-and-events/faculty-of-english/the-craft-texture-and-aesthetics-of-letter-forms-from-antiquity-to-the-present/the-craft-texture-and-aesthetics-of-letter-forms-from-antiquity-to-the-present-02-04-sep-2025

For further information please contact one of the organisers at this e-mail
address: letterforms@english.cam.ac.uk

Organising committee: Prof. Marcus Waithe (co-chair), Prof. Orietta Da
Rold (co-chair), Dr Jessica Berenbeim, Dr Ruth Abbott, Prof. Elaine
Treharne, Prof. Marcos Martinón-Torres, Mr Maciej Pawlikowski, Dr Matteo
Seita, Professor Jason Scott-Warren, Miss Eleanor Parmenter, Logan Rivers.

Sponsors: Stanford Text Technologies (Stanford), Faculty of English
(Cambridge), University Research Institute (Cambridge)

The Craft, Texture, and Aesthetics of Letter Forms from Antiquity to the Present Venue: University of Cambridge, Faculty of English 2nd to 4th September 2025 Co-hosted by the Faculty of English, University of Cambridge; Stanford Text Technologies, Stanford University, and The University Library Research Institute <https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/events/lettering/index.htm> conference page *Detailed Program Schedule and Registration link <https://www.english.cam.ac.uk/events/lettering/programme.html>* ‘The Craft, Texture, and Aesthetics of Letter Forms’ will bring together scholars, practitioners and heritage experts to explore the matter of lettering, its practice and study. By marrying a range of disciplinary and professional approaches, we hope to recover the aesthetic, historical, and material significance of letter formation in all its rich variety. We will do this across all material supports – whether stone, vellum, paper, metal or wood – and across media ranging from letters inked, engraved and incised, to those freshly pixelated for our computer screens. In the process, we aim to treat letter forms holistically, as phenomena that migrate dynamically between different times, different cultures, different media, different professions, and ultimately different disciplines. This event seeks to broaden that emphasis in the study of letter forms, examining not only the historical but also the aesthetic qualities of letter forms and the evolving knowledge they convey. By engaging experts from various backgrounds, the conference intends to foster conversations that blend academic research with practitioner insights, bridging the gap between scholarly study and hands-on practice in lettering. This event is an opportunity to develop perspectives that speak both to other fields and to other sides of the subject. For instance, a purely descriptive focus can miss the aesthetic character of letter forms and the kinds of tacit knowledge that they elaborate. Equally, the supposed decline of handwriting in the digital age raises questions about what forms of awareness – cognitive, tactile, stylistic – might be being lost to our ‘hands ’even as we type. Alongside these visible and material contexts, we are equally interested in probing the invisible manifestations of letters’ form and texture. What happens, for instance, when we think about the idea of a letter that exists beyond any single manifestation; and how might we cognise the character of words constructed from radio waves or the data of binary code? The event will focus on bringing together practitioners and academic participants. All sessions will be plenary. Places are limited to allow us to cover catering and registration costs for speakers. Practitioners will include: - Tom Frith-Powell (Master Papermaker, the Paper Foundation) - The Cardozo Kindersley Workshop (Lida Lopes Cardozo Kindersley MBE and Roxanne Kindersley) - Riccardo Olocco (typeface designer) - Humphrey Stone (typographer and book designer) - Sebastian Carter (fine printer and paper artist) - Patricia Lovett MBE (scribe and illuminator) - Susan Hufton (calligrapher and weaver) Register your place <https://onlinesales.admin.cam.ac.uk/conferences-and-events/faculty-of-english/the-craft-texture-and-aesthetics-of-letter-forms-from-antiquity-to-the-present/the-craft-texture-and-aesthetics-of-letter-forms-from-antiquity-to-the-present-02-04-sep-2025> For further information please contact one of the organisers at this e-mail address: letterforms@english.cam.ac.uk *Organising committee*: Prof. Marcus Waithe (co-chair), Prof. Orietta Da Rold (co-chair), Dr Jessica Berenbeim, Dr Ruth Abbott, Prof. Elaine Treharne, Prof. Marcos Martinón-Torres, Mr Maciej Pawlikowski, Dr Matteo Seita, Professor Jason Scott-Warren, Miss Eleanor Parmenter, Logan Rivers. *Sponsors*: Stanford Text Technologies (Stanford), Faculty of English (Cambridge), University Research Institute (Cambridge)