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Cartoon: My Ladyboy Book (medium) by Mike Baird tagged book,ladyboy,life,thailand

My Ladyboy Book

#413516 / viewed 2899 times
Mike Baird By Mike Baird
on October 03, 2022
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Gn Elliot Font -

The typeface known colloquially as "GN Elliot" represents a unique intersection of industrial utility and modernist typography. Unlike commercial fonts driven by aesthetic trends, GN Elliot emerged from the specific engineering requirements of British Rail (BR) signage in the mid-20th century. This paper examines the origins, visual characteristics, and legacy of the font, clarifying its relationship to its more famous contemporaries (Rail Alphabet and Gill Sans) and providing a definitive identification guide for designers and historians.

[Generated AI] Date: October 2023

The name "GN Elliot" is often misattributed or conflated with broader families of British transport type. This paper argues that GN Elliot is not a standalone retail typeface but a specific, possibly custom-drawn or adapted sans-serif used primarily by the Great Northern Railway (GNR) and subsequently British Railways (BR) during the 1950s and 1960s. The name itself likely derives from a specific signwriter, draftsman, or a misinterpretation of "Grotesque No. Elliot" – referencing the Victorian "Grotesque" sans-serif lineage. gn elliot font

| Feature | GN Elliot | Gill Sans | Akzidenz-Grotesk | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Straight leg, often with a slight spur | Curved, calligraphic leg | Straight leg, no spur | | Lowercase 'a' | Double-storey (bowl with top arc) | Double-storey but narrower | Single-storey (simple circle with tail) | | Lowercase 'g' | Open bowl with a distinct ear | Closed bowl, no ear | Open bowl, no ear | | Numerals | Old-style or lining with uniform stroke | Inconsistent stroke weight | Uniform, geometric | | General weight | Medium, with a slight vertical stress | Vertical, with distinct thin/thick contrast | Even, almost monoline | The typeface known colloquially as "GN Elliot" represents

GN Elliot is best understood as a transitional industrial grotesque – a working font for a working railway. Its value lies not in digital perfection but in its authenticity to a specific era of British industrial design. For contemporary use, designers seeking the "GN Elliot look" should combine characteristics of mid-weight grotesques with the idiosyncratic open bowls and flat-topped 'A's documented in 1950s BR signage manuals. [Generated AI] Date: October 2023 The name "GN

Form Follows Function: The Industrial Modernism of GN Elliot