An independent archive of typography.
Topics
Formats
Typefaces

The Synthi Educational Handbook

Contributed by Stephen Coles on Mar 19th, 2018. Artwork published in
April 1972
.
A typo on the cover: “Electronic Music Studios of America(n)”
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.

A typo on the cover: “Electronic Music Studios of America(n)

The EMS Synthi (first available in May 1971) was a portable modular analog synthesizer made by Electronic Music Studios of England. The EMS Synthi AKS (March 1972) was a version with a built-in keyboard and sequencer. The synthesizers were used by artists such as Brian Eno and Pink Floyd.

This handbook, presumably produced with an IBM Selectric typewriter, was written by Peter Grogono, a computer programmer who developed EMS software. The diagrams are captioned with IBM’s Script and Light Italic.

Incidentally, about 40 years later, Light Italic inspired Vulf Mono, a font used by audio software company Goodhertz.

The Synthi Educational Handbook 2
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The Synthi Educational Handbook 3
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The Synthi Educational Handbook 4
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The Synthi Educational Handbook 5
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The Synthi Educational Handbook 6
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.
The Synthi Educational Handbook 7
Source: dl.lojinx.com License: All Rights Reserved.

1 Comment on “The Synthi Educational Handbook

  1. Over on Twitter, Fredrick Brennan identified the seriffed text face as IBM Executive Modern and mentions that Cutive is a modern restoration.

    Thanks, Fredrick!

Post a comment