There it is second row down next to the Y on the left. The type sorts were in the Plantin Moretus Museum the location of two of the oldest printing presses in the world and both home and workshop of the Plantin Moretus family from the 16th Century until in 1876 when the whole caboodle was sold to the city of Antwerp and today is on the UNESCO World Heritage List
It houses libraries, maps and rare books such as this 16th Century Bible Polyglotta written in five languages. Just imagine how many different little letters and fonts you would need to make this page.
But it is just as interesting to walk around this museum and see how a Flemish trading family lived in those sometimes turbulent centuries. Here is its tranquil courtyard which at a stretch could contain another X if you considered it a tree planted garden walk, a xystus ---
An entry to ABC Wednesday, a walk through the alphabet from A to Z
love the word polyglotta - knew what it meant, but still appreciated it.
ReplyDeleteROG, ABC Wednesday team
Good one for the x!
ReplyDeleteHow cool is that - you photographed just the right letter for us at ABCW!
ReplyDeleteLeslie
abcw team
Wonderful choice and museum looks good.
ReplyDeleteOh yeah, huge X.
ReplyDeleteX is for Xeroderma
I'm a sucker for anything that has to do with typography-especially typesets like this one!
ReplyDeleteLove that last X, beautiful!
ReplyDeleteXanthopsia
Rose, ABC Wednesday Team
I love typesets and have started a collection of odd letters. I still have a ways to go as I only have 8 (different letters) out of 26.
ReplyDeleteYou are a clever soul. A literal and conceptual X. Most of us are challenged to find only one. The first typeset photo is wonderful. Think of the zillions of words and books these metal letters create!
ReplyDeleteso interesting, and the courtyard and garden look so peaceful
ReplyDelete