 Save your applause for you haven't seen nothing. Yes, I want to show you a CD-ROM a funny idea and the idea was by Susie Taylor He told me I should do a CD-ROM for this occasion here in San Francisco in September 2002 I had no experience in making a CD-ROM. I could design a book But a CD-ROM was something new for me but I had good friends who helped me programming and so and At the end We finished it practically in the last moment before our take off last Thursday What you'll see here today is not the final version It is so-called beta test so you have to you have to be careful with your critics and But we will do our best and we change some of the pages But just this is an introduction that you are not too unhappy what you see You see it is Normally in a book you have in front of you the pages and you can find out what is wrong or not In a CD-ROM you have to finish all the whole Section before you can see something It's like computers to see In the old days let's say if you have a problem with your machine Let the press machine you took a screwdriver and a hammer and you could fix it in a few minutes it's a Computer you had other problems. I wanted to mention any name of a company must be careful but Sometimes you get really nervous if this funny thing doesn't work and the same was all the time in Preparing this CD-ROM So I will show it to you now and I have to go down for I need the help of linear. She is the expert in Showing the CD-ROM. Yeah, here we are My voice is not very good. I have not a voice like Peter Castro Maximum leader or one of these Senators from Texas, but I will try my best So let's start the first picture We have technical problems. Just a second. So you see Electronics are perfect and beautiful if they are working and now we are starting with the problem again It worked a half an hour before What's the matter? David Schwab is fixing it right now so So I give you a little more information about the CD-ROM As I told you it's not finished It will take some more weeks when I'm back in Germany and so I think it will be ready By the end of October or mid of October and you can get it from the Kerry library in Retro the Institute of Technology They will distribute this CD-ROM in the USA in Germany. It is a volume build library And in Japan it is the Tokyo library in Tokyo So We're live yeah, you need patient if you use computers, you know So you will get a little Neporello. Oh, yes. Now, let's start you can use this CD-ROM in different ways You can have it as a film running or you can have it also to see Each page by a mouse click now we do it by a mouse click so it saves time and You have not to read all this the lines underneath the pictures. This I will tell you so We will finish this in time before But normally it takes more than an hour, so they must know this Next please so you have seen I am born in Nuremberg and you see here a few pictures of Nuremberg before It was destroyed during the war This is a manuscript done 1938 Nuremberg 1918 as I was born Was not a good place to select if you go come to earth it was very hard to Live there and in 1918 November 1980 We had in Europe since Spanish flu Which killed more than 20 millions 20 million people Just by this Spanish flu more people have been killed by this illness then during the whole World War one on the allies and on the German front Nobody knows is that is such a big difference in the figures that 20 millions killed on this is By this Spanish flu two of my siblings died within four weeks also in 1918 and Next and the conditions in the town, you know November early November 1918 the revolution was in Berlin and also Nuremberg was affected and the Kaiser went away to the Netherlands and The life conditions have been very very bad and the doctors gave Me not very much time for living. They told me my mother even though Live more than a few years for I was in very Bad shape as I was born and I didn't have enough weight as a normal baby had But you see doctors have sometimes wrong decisions So I'm nearly 83 now and all the doctors don't live again next As a pictures of Nuremberg all this building many of these buildings are not existing anymore Those really documents this manuscript to the house. They have rebuilt it again. It was also partly destroyed by air raids This is My first experience in let's say lettering or calligraphy or how would you want to call this? very funny initials But you have to start once Earlier Next is a Picture of my school room which you had in these days not always very kind teachers and and this was a picture As I want to have in my memory of all these cool years next on the left side. There's a Funny alphabet. It's a secret alphabet for my mother shouldn't read everything which I was changing with my brother and with my friends so I had this That ring done and she was really sometimes so unhappy for she didn't know what these notes mean On the right hand side you see some drawings of self-made toys My mother didn't my parents didn't have enough money. So we had practically no toys as Child as kids and but I had good friends and wealthy friends. So we could Play with their toys Normal for me. I've never thought why I have no toys and they have But I had the opportunity and it was fine. Next please In this shoebox shoebox is a electro Kid electrical kid Which I made for myself. You see I had no money. My parents had no money and It gives you an idea As a young fellow who wanted to do something and to use time and was interested in electricity To get along with all these experimental things. So this is the shoebox is electrical kid next and then I Designed also an instruction book for this So this is a title page one of my very first book designs if you take this this way the lettering is not the best so don't Look too careful to this lettering, but at that time I thought it was good. So next please Here you see the instruction book with all the informations how you could what you could do with this simple Simple electrical kid Next please So a patient it comes after a while Yeah, you see I was not allowed to study electrical engineering. So I had to find a way To do something and my parents thought I should become and Lissac refer so I went to all these companies and showed my my Designs and pictures Folio and they said always yes very nice very good But after some political questions, they said I'm sorry. We are sorry. We can't take you Or we had would have problems with you for my father was very much engaged in the trade unions and I had the same name of my father. So we had I had a lot of problems in this case So the last company in the telephone book Company was called Ulrich I went to them after eight months running through the whole city about this and Showed my work and they looked at it and said oh fine nice And the last moment they didn't ask political questions But the last moment they said yeah, but we are very sorry. We have no this geography But if you like you can Become a photo detachment you can start next Monday. I Said yes, so I went home by a bicycle and look in the dictionary. What is doing? What is doing in the job of a photo detachment? So I became a photo detachment is a four years of apprenticeship Next doing this time there was an exhibition a memorial exhibition of Rudolph Koch in Nuremberg He was also born in Nuremberg nine 1876 and there was a memorial exhibition. He passed away in 1934 and I saw his work and I and this changed my life this exhibition I was so fascinated that I wanted also to become a lettering artist I Gained to the library look to books. They had two books which were instruction books for lettering one by Rudolph Koch and one by Edward Johnson the same books is my wife used but far away from me didn't know her and In that time Was the beginning of my let's say career as I also want to call it of lettering What you see here are two Cutouts paper cuts one in gold paper and one in normal paper like paper You have to put all the letters that they connect to get them together If you do it as a paper cut next please and after I finished my apprenticeship as a photo retoucher I went to Frankfurt for Nuremberg was not a good place to live by the political situation in Nuremberg and Frankfurt was more liberal at that time still at that time so I went to Frankfurt and into the Workshop of Paul Koch the son of Rudolph Koch Here you see a drawing of the house some first Nick in the Mr. Red Arrow It was a house building 1360 but destroyed unfortunately 1944 completely you see nothing again anymore of this building the same is here The riverfront of Frankfurt completely destroyed and now with new and ugly houses Next please a Koch Paul Koch was specialized in music printing and so I did some Manuscripts with music notation here Brahms two pages and And also Beethoven these two pages what you can see here doing my time I Went to Frankfurt 1938 during this time I get connection with the type found the Stemple AG through a fellow type historian Gustav Mori and I Showed them some of my sketches of letters and so and so and they found This type which you see here. This is a drawing of the Kirkengaard Fracture This they wanted to do as a type I was very happy my first time they paid me very badly but After a while as I was art director of the same company I told them which was not very fair from you said you paid me such a bad salary for this design and the answer was Yes, therefore we are the better salesman It's a nice answer so next please this is a drawing of the Working table of the punch cutter who cut was cutting Kirkengaard and his name was August Rosenberger so he's a punchies and you see the Tools what he needs for all bigger to make a typeface like next please what you see here is a copy of a manuscript Flemish manuscript just to train my hand and to get Informations how these old fellows of the 16th century or 15th century use the colors is a famous German manuscript the chronic of the counts of Clevee Doing this time in Frankfurt. I did some book design for publishers and also some manuscript for myself That's a binding to this manuscript. They've been done much much later for I wasn't married at that time is good room But what is interesting here is the oval In the center of this page is done with a pointed brush It takes several hours to make it Today with a computer you can do it in few minutes And you can have 20 by the variations of an oval but at that time you had to do all by your hand two pages from these manuscripts now a page from a Sketchbook, which I did during the war. I was stationed in France mostly stationed in France designing maps of Spain and a lot of time for myself and therefore I use this time and Did some drawings watercolors also lettering. This is a quotation by Rudolf Koch two other pages All from these sketchbooks some watercolors here Weimar In which I was stationed first, but didn't see good room at that time the cathedral of Berlin before it was destroyed Just with a fountain pen drawing with a fountain pen pencil drawing of Potsdam Johnson C. Tell us Dishon which our Geographic service was stationed in this building that is a book when he's on the same river in Paris pencil drawing At the most time I was in Porto next to the Spanish border for we had to do something especially Special maps of Spain and cheap rollers. This was our business here. You have a page which is extremely small and You can see the original size in this booklet which line of type did about the subfino This is the original size of this Votation by Hans von Weber Done with a summer wheel pointed pen Quite small things that is only four millimeters in height At large it looks much better a manuscript, which I did also in Porto This pencil drawing now with pen drawings some of the Roy the Roman ruins in Porto again the same the same blast and Here also two other pages I told you and a lot of time. So I made also some Exercises in letters. You you see I don't count how many variations of each letter I did just just for fun for myself some more drawings from the sketchbook Shalom so son in France and The right-hand side. This is the Heldereen tower in Tübingen In the southern part of Germany I was stationed in Tübingen the hospital. Therefore I could do this the end of the war Yeah, first I was in Heidelberg in the hospital and then I say Moved us to Tübingen for the American army was coming to Heidelberg This time I was an air raid on Frankfurt and they destroyed my home in there in one of these Suburbs of Frankfurt see how it is how it looks after an air raid Next is a nice text about the situation in Germany 1814 Which means it was the same situation as it was 1945 This was after the Napoleon war and 45, you know what was going on In all these years next is also a drawing of water color done in the hospital it's one of these Insects the insects is the original size is ten millimetres A two point five mill centimeters excuse me next Manuscript which I did shortly after the war. I was going back to Nuremberg for my to my parents For as I you have seen my home in Frankfurt was destroyed this was done on Purple Japanese paper like a version manuscript the binding also of course by Gudrun flexible binding in dark green leather Two pages from the same manuscript with the color phone With some Arabic lines. I learned Arabic during my time in the hospital before I was In a room in which a lot of French soldiers African soldiers have been so I learned from them Arabic There's a nice story about Arabic, but I want to tell it now here You can read it in a book about alphabets. There is a story about Arabic We can go through the next pages for this Books you have here in the library that is Ben engraver fate on Stichel So we can run through quickly. I wanted to wait before the text lines coming out. Let's go next Yeah, they're running out of time and this is a plate all these pages of Ben engraver. They've been cut by August Rosenberger in lead So you see one of his plates the original plates and also one of these you can I think two of these You can see here in the library. They have two of the Rosenberger plates here It's a building so nothing is new what I'm showing here There's other publication done during the war and shortly after the war Lumen I would say flower alphabet next is a binding also by Gudrun, of course and We go through these pages for the original book is also here in the library. You can see so you have to look here All the pages very long, but here you see the English translations put on which are not of course It's a German edition which is upstairs They are hand colored. So you see these are cuts also by Rosenberger and hand colored and she's Butterflies are done with pastel to get this drain of a of a wing of a butterfly Very hard to do and it's not easy Protect this is one page. This is the last page as it's normally say printing from a blade by Rosenberger with a quotation by Leonardo da Vinci and it is for resist design includes four Items to see a description of this anagram as it is called H, C, A, P and F What it means in German, of course on C's design I had the idea to do more on this But I was running out of time at that time where to do some other things and I dropped the idea too bad But too late But it's the next as the end papers of the bloom and I would say Bring it in green color next week Now we are going more to type design quotation by Thomas James captain Sanderson with some quotation by other people the drawing here for Paladino italic Which of course was for metal to see three of the Types next yeah, it's okay Next please The type specimen of Paladino The description of the whole family here on the right hand side Yes, the Paladino page poster done by Microsoft with all the This is the open typeface of Paladino with more than 1200 figures for each version Crazy idea, but they wanted to do it. That is a Cyrillic version of Paladino This is the empty space of Russia. What you see here? Space of Russia coming back to the post of Microsoft In post Bill Gates idea to have a typeface which has every But which will cover every language in using Latin Cyrillic or Greek characters, so we had to do it for Armenian and for all these funny Countries in Russia and in other places and ending up with 1200 characters. It was not a nice job at all And for you see as a normal European you don't know all these funny characters which you have in Cyrillic That's a computer is alive as you know No, it's not your fault. It's a computer Will you start again, what do we do? Yes Sorry, I warned you already that is we would have problems now the first problem is starting But we will get it again. Yeah, coming back to the type designs what you see next after Paladino is the beginning of optima and Optima started 1950. I was in Italy as a tourist and in Florence and in Rome and did sketches of Roman inscriptions and especially in Florence I Was in Santa Croce and was doing sketches from these gravestones in the floor of Santa Croce and I didn't have any paper with me. So I used 2000 liter bank notes and put my sketches on the bank notes. You will see them soon and I think It's not the normal use of bank notes, but it was the only way to get it on paper. You can go in the years Yeah Must be 1950 So optima started in Florence and it was also my first idea to name the face the face Fiorentina that means Florence and But the temple people didn't like this idea And had changed it to optima, which I think is not a good name for a typeface Of such a classical typeface to overdone optima by optima So Beethoven is helping us over to get Oh, yes 46 yes, you can go through now Oh, maybe but I told you this is a test version and therefore you have to see sometimes the same Picture twice is the flower alphabet and if you go in the 70 and you go back Maybe the easiest way Go out and Yes, here you see the drawings for Linotype altars with a mobile which I have in my home Here you see these letters Turning around and the letters are connected with our family. See is our son Christian then we have age and we have G and the end X Y and set that is a mobile always turning. Here's a normal drawing The italic also done for line of time. This is the milieu You see line of type matrices on the edge the other type designed for samples called physical figures Connection with Melior Also, Melior redesigned for the photocomposition machine with some explanations of the drawing and here you see this Thousand milliliter Banknotes with the drawings of optima. This was the start of optima. I discovered these just by accident a few months ago In an Italian book So I'm very happy that I have really the first drawings I always thought my Design which I did for stemble was the very first but here you see it started much earlier next is some drawings here from the crochet and also some inscriptions in Florence and in Rome you said the structure of optima is this Outline little Chinese looking outlines and And specimen sheet of the stemble foundry of the 36 point optima Next please and optima is used here in this country for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington all these More than 50,000 names than this optima. Yeah, boss Yeah, this was some other design for stempels Arabic Two different versions for you. I told you I had some experience in Arabic Not under the best conditions, but I learned quite a lot. It was very interesting to learn Arabic next some Greek characters that is calligraphy Now some of my publications the manual a typographic from 1954 the first one in 16 different languages the second one was 68 with 18 different languages These are so called primavera ornaments what you have seen this is Initials typeface done by my wife Ariadne initials yes, um pages of a Competition liberal forum done in Stockholm by the Royal Library a lot in Stockholm and These are two proposals for Bible pages and here also in Stockholm. I It's a very famous Swedish author Carl Mikael Bellman character like Like Walt Whitman, I would say and he did very funny Songs and so on here. You see it's done like you use red wine. Let's say On a paper nap It's the same idea with The effect of a lipstick Especially for if you know more about Charles Baudelaire, Paris and all this Was a title page here this is Not very good in the reproduction here done on Gray Japanese paper and it's very hard on this paper for it's not died You see it's very it's not sized so it's very hard to To write on but I wanted to to get a possibility to show that it could be done Here as a page also on Japanese purple Japanese paper Done for Philip Hofer in Cambridge, Mr. Sushits Pre-amble of the chart of the United Nations done for the people Morgan library in New York 1960 now some book design book Holika With the woodcuts by Aristide my role Done in the deotema typeface of my wife italic and Roman gitellic is the German text for German is running much longer. So I needed a smaller running typeface and the other face Again going to see if 70 and you can go But you see how much space you need if you make that It worked perfect before we started here It's afternoon, isn't so yes, we tested it three times. Yes So again and you go back and so into the 1970 And go back now here. We are again. This is this Publication done in deotema italic and Roman is woodcuts by My y'all why it jumps again No, so other publications typographic variations here Which you can see also upstairs in the library. They have all my publications and So we can go through this very quickly some more pages Manualit typographical for the 18 languages Some book designs for German publishers using wood engravings by Doree also for this balsak edition. This is the Dust jacket American theater was a whole Serious of books in different colors of the different language countries With the title page and maybe come back to the time page the title page shows also the contents so you have Just an idea to do it next please in addition of zero two in two volumes with a Pencil drawing of zero two this is a Brahms publication about Brahms and This crayon done with a crayon here says four hundred of the young Brahms, you know Brahms novel is Showing this is long beard. It's a 19th century beard Next time you're drawing with pencil of teller all Wasn't a nice fellow at all. You see it very clear here During the French Revolution Then there's a publication a private publication by a German publisher a mint us is Next please is The use of Dio Tima typeface of my wife and this by Casinari said Aquatint illustrations designer artists living in Milano next Now we are coming closer to Jack Stauffacher said Antiqua was a Name within the company which the real name is hunt Roman You see on the third column top of the third column Stauffacher Next to stop our Josephine his wife Then you see also Hunt in the first row so just to show how the letters are connected within words So this and the idea of doing The hunt Roman was by Jack Stauffacher To Mrs. Hunt and she liked to have an own typeface for her own for a private Publications is used now by the hunt botanical library in Pittsburgh Thanks, this is a broadside as a commission for the container cooperation of America in Chicago With different languages with quotations in different languages Also two lingual in German and Italian and Michelangelo sonnet With a translation by Reiner Maria Rilke Here I think your nose is here in done for the San Francisco public library You can see it upstairs the original so you have not to look at here next is a sheet for a Collector here in Santa Barbara who wanted to have a historic type historic letters lettering done this a new quotations, so this is in a style of an historic Typeface and not typeface excuse me alphabet next Unfortunately, not very good to see it is a big sheet and it's or you can see it as the song of the sun by echinaton and It's a six green printed on acetate So you could put it on a window and the sun shines through this was the idea behind this Was very complicated to do to print on acetate now. We are going to the hallmark time this Some sketches for the hallmark actual Done on a sheet. It's a printed sheet of this cross here just To show how the type could be Also for hallmarks a textura hallmark textura drawings and the final Type done for photo composition. This was done at a trickstool next time. I guess free written letters for a Christmas card and Executed in Kansas City on parchment now at this time during my time this hallmark we had some ideas to Get book production Let's say a little more organized and to find ways to reduce Is it all it which is normal in big companies to reduce? Secures for the publications so we figured out and I figured out with some new ways of concentrating with some special This is a bit to get a production done in the program. So you had to put together different kinds of Designs and you get out maybe a design which is In this within a series very easy to produce therefore a standard size for the for the Publications yet only one format so you had not very much varieties in the type area as a pictures you could have free at that time and Just save only to get it more and more Done as a Regular production so all my goes the first who are into it was interested in typographic Computer program not computer typographic programs computer programs was later This is now my connections with it This is a cut-in aluminum and Was connected with my Gaudi Award 1969 at it. This is the entrance At it with this beautiful design by Joseph Albers Yeah, my connections also with it with type Metal type still this metal type at that time and This was done for Ben Lieberman in New Rochelle, New York Then the lay of the case the California case. I think it's called He is design which I did for hallmark which never was used Some ideas about calligraphy next to this next please now you see some of these Yeah Funny way of doing calligraphy not with a pen this is scratched into the surface of Prepared panel and I scratched it with a Steel Cut like a broad edge pen. So all this what you see is not done with a pen, but with a steel Brought or you see the first you paint this black Then you overlay it with white and then stretch out and you get all these Lettering it looks like it is done directly on this white surface. I Did several of these huge huge panels not very small The one here is a quotation by False standard. This is a Greek and and German Quotation by plateau This is a tricky thing of my American Programmer he wanted to do to show his talent. Why not? Maybe we will change this a little but it gives you an idea of what you can manipulate in these days So this is a normal panel I'm seeing Lettering or calligraphy done on the Japanese gold paper It's real. This is what is how you call this? What's called? Gold leaf. Yes a gold leaf. It's not easy to to write on gold leaf. You have to find out a way That is so Hard that it doesn't normally take the ink, but you find where you have to find ways think That is one of the secret trick number five Yes, other page is a quotation by Laotzi Then the same ones on silver leaf But silver leaf took the color, but not the gold. I don't know why it's the same material. It's also metal This is a big one with Also all scratched into The surface of surface was first white and then it overpainted with black and then you scratch it out and you get the white letter This is done with oil paint not with Other are all done with tempera, but this is done with oil paint sentenced by Yerchi Lake, which is Very hard to translate 2019 Some fraud sites, which I did during my time with IT Here a letter to Gutenberg signed by Alexander Lawson and Proven and myself we wrote to him and tell him or want to inform him what's going on This is new techniques in digital type And then next to this is a quotation A quotation about Photo lettering what you have to remember if you do something in photo lettering done for Edward Rohnsall in New York who was an inventor of photo lettering in 36 and this was one of His birthday presents, which I did next a poster done for IT my typography computer programs This is a Yeah, a layout or diagram For instruction if you are starting with Calligraphy or with lettering and if you have problems How far you can go and what you have to make if you go back. There's an English translation also See if you get confused you have to go back to your base and also This gives you all your help, but you need it's the same in your computer You have also on top help the same here for calligraphy Next is now we are here in Stanford This is the oiler design Which was the idea of dr. Donald news who is here with us tonight for today and He started to have a typeface especially for mathematics in Roman Greek practical and one characters in Hebrew This is the drawing for this You just see how complicated it was in these days to do one character likes it Back to a W and then the right hand side. You see all the characters of the oiler Fund I had a Commission from the government of Nigeria the two new typeface which could be used by the different tribes and Nations within like Nigeria 400 languages they have and they want to get out Language or let's say letter forms alphabet, which could be used by all of them Besides the Arabic the north is Arabic. That's the south is Roman and and For all these dialects, we had to find out a solution and what you see here is the school book Alphabet and Everything was finished and there was a coop in Lagos and say quit all these cultural ideas and Stopped everything and now they have the same disorder as it was before All the different languages I have their own alphabets Special characters to the Roman alphabet. What you see here is also Three-dimensional cutting in your aluminum and you see here in the middle of a computer component board included in this little Sign it's not little. It's quite big. I was saying something I did in plexiglass and it is illuminated from The bottom and so you have a very nice reflection inside these plexiglass Letters let us have a sickness of eight millimeters Next please now we are closer here to California this is one of the very first Apple computers Which I did which I received from Steve Jobs and That's the first time day. I could use it. I made a design just you see it But it didn't work. It was the first Design I did I was nearly finished and sense a bomb appeared Everything was lost and I was so unhappy my first experience with a computer. I Was so unhappy that I couldn't eat anything the whole day my wife could Ask my wife so go back to normal things that is Not to computers too much. This is a Renaissance Roman with different kinds of characters and diggers and for scan graphic company in Hamburg needs them Using this type with the old version for a keep sake touring a Conference in Tokyo the lettering the Japanese is done by What is his name? Shinohara Aita Shinohara Next please this I did also for a Japanese company Desk diary with some calligraphy inside also for a Japanese collector who was a Fan of rake and he wanted to have a rake quotation in German for pages of Instruction book There's one in English French Spanish and German now you see the kaleidoscope picture and Sado Rebo formula with all these There's mystery Inside what does it mean the whole thing there are lots of of Descriptions and one of one of them I wrote and there was a site here It was used also for a puzzle by the Royal Society of Arts in London. So you see it's not an easy puzzle my wife is specialized in puzzles But this is as he told me it's very complicated to do British British Did a Program called HC program for you a way w in Hamburg This is a description of the English version and How it works and you see on The one side good back needed two hundred ninety characters to get his perfect a Columns for the 42 line Bible, but we don't have 290 characters so we have to find other ways and so we figured out to stretch and Do to manipulate a little the characters you don't see it But you see on the second column which is this done with the program said it runs smaller the whole and you have Not more than two I've made it first and So it was quite complicated. I don't have to talk too much. Let's go This you may know it was an exhibition here in in the library This is also done with dr. Knuth 3.16 Bible text illuminated and Done with Calligraphic pages from Kelly give us all over the world. I Think you saw here the original designs in San Francisco This is the broadside in which I was working several years It is a homage to life needs Who is the inventor of the dual and binary system which you use today in all your computers? Nobody knows that this was done in the 18th century already and This is a description how it works and the sources of the whole thing. He was really a great man This is William Morris and this is ideas about air pollution and This could be written in these days, but this was done 1839 you can't believe what he has foreseen the conditions which we are which we have around us today the same in Calligraphy this other was done in in type Was done for the exhibition in Texas Now we are closer to the end. This is a publication poetry through typography and Published by Kelly Winnerton press Kelly is here in New York City. Yeah, I think you have fun on Display upstairs of these two pages from this publication. This was a Funny idea of some friends. I did some cues and they said can you Do more than only 10 I think I can do some more. So I ended up with 50 quotation from your Declaration of Independence part of the Declaration of Independence by Jefferson In the collection of Jerry Kelly Then we have here some of my logo designs in all the years put together different publishers This on the right hand side only for one publisher to find the best solution The last one is what we what he did what he Take was taken Next week the same here. You're on the left-hand side for the Nuremberg National Museum Also different variations just To find the best solution Also here so you see some American companies here This the queue was for a company for the organization in Washington DC and below is The logo for the champion paper company Next please. Oh, let me can't go back again. So to Help the Californians in the center of the left-hand side. You see the logo for the Stanford library Friends of the Stanford library as yeah Next please This is a subfino Leporello, which you can get here we have here some of these Which you see the different drawings Alphabets of the subfino with legal chairs and all kinds of things and you see I think on your and your Locations which you have here also a lot of use of tapfinos It is it's one of the drawings sketches or ligatures What's up, you know Next please And here you see Drawings the final drawings It was started with several hundreds of characters and then after a while we had to cut it down to four Simple alphabets, but it's a long story. I wanted to talk about it. It's either way you can read it on this little booklet page which Shows all my type designs in all the years from 1938 with killing cut you have seen it till 1980 1998 and now we are on the end you see two designs for some covers of Publications one was for the Chicago and the last the other one was for the kind of which Charity did for the grow your club in London and in New York Can you get now the music? Oh, yeah, you see these are something that we have worked on but Just to show it now. It's a description of the Music which is used here for the CD-ROM done by the epic trio a very famous trio in Germany This is a description of the epic trio and shows all the titles of the music which was used during the whole story Beginning with Beethoven ending up with Felix Mendelssohn-Badolty Between here now This is the end of the story with all the names of People who are involved in this CD-ROM by the bunch of people you see and