Released in 1910 with Gebr. Klingspor, Deutsche Schrift
fett (extrabold) was Rudolf Koch’s first published typeface.
Two lighter weights – mager (regular) and
halbfett (bold) – as well as a schmal
(condensed) and a peculiar schräg (oblique) were added
later on. So was Deutsche Zierschrift, a related
decorated cut. The generically named family (“German Type”, i.e.
blackletter) also became known as Koch-Fraktur, or
Kochschrift. Marketed abroad as Oxford.
[M.
Ashworth]
There are a number of digitizations, including versions by
Delbanco (mager, halbfett, titling, decorative
caps), Peter Wiegel, Lamatas un Slazdi, and Alter Littera
(fett each). The most More…
Released in 1910 with Gebr. Klingspor, Deutsche Schrift fett (extrabold) was Rudolf Koch’s first published typeface. Two lighter weights – mager (regular) and halbfett (bold) – as well as a schmal (condensed) and a peculiar schräg (oblique) were added later on. So was Deutsche Zierschrift, a related decorated cut. The generically named family (“German Type”, i.e. blackletter) also became known as Koch-Fraktur, or Kochschrift. Marketed abroad as Oxford. [M. Ashworth]
There are a number of digitizations, including versions by Delbanco (mager, halbfett, titling, decorative caps), Peter Wiegel, Lamatas un Slazdi, and Alter Littera (fett each). The most complete version seems to be the one by Gerhard Helzel (mager and halbfett 10pt, halbfett and schräg 20pt, fett with swash caps, schmal).