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  1. 4. Apr. 2017 · Nicolas Jenson was born in Sommevoire, in northeastern France, probably in the 1430s. Although little is known of his life before he started printing in Venice, historians seem certain he had had previous experience in fine metalworking and he is thought to have been the director of the mint in Tours. According to some chronicles, at the end of 1458 the French king Charles VII sent Jenson to ...

  2. 17. Juni 2018 · Nicolas Jenson (1420 en Sommevoire, Francia – 1480 en Venecia) Bibliografía selecta Nicholas Jenson and the Rise of Venetian Publishing in Renaissance Europe, de Martin Lowry (Blackwell Publishers. Abril de 1991) Entre los muchos impresores establecidos, en su mayoría alemanes, destacamos muy especialmente la figura del francés Nicolas Jenson

  3. Nicolas Jenson (Sommevoire, circa 1420 – Venetië, 1480) was een Frans stempelsnijder, typograaf avant la lettre, drukker, uitgever en boekhandelaar. Jenson bezat sinds 1470 in Venetië een drukkerij. Hij was de eerste drukker die volledig voor ons herkenbare letters gebruikte en zijn letterontwerp heeft veel invloed gehad.

  4. Le père du caractère romain: Nicolas Jenson. E VERS 1420 A SOMMEVOIRE EN CHAMPAGNE, Nicolas Jenson était graveur et directeur de la Monnaie du roi à Tour, lorsque en 1458, Charles VII « ayant sceu que Messire Guthenberg, chevalier, demourant à Mayence au païs d’Alemaigne, avoit mis en lumiere l’invencion d’imprimer par poinçons et ...

  5. Nicolas Jenson(ニコラ・ジェンソン)は2019年にスタートしたカットソーブランド。世の中に溢れるベーシックと、用意されたシンプルという名のプロダクト。Nicolas Jensonは、その極シンプルなデザインに、上質な素材の使用と日本人女性のカラダにフィットするフォルムを作り上げ、独自のサイズ ...

  6. Nicolas Jenson. Nicholas (or Nicolas) Jenson (c. 1420–1480) was a French engraver, pioneer, printer and type designer who carried out most of his work in Venice, Italy. Jenson acted as Master of the French Royal Mint at Tours and is credited with being the creator of one of the finest early Roman typefaces. Read more on Wikipedia.

  7. 19. Juli 2014 · Nicolas Jenson: c. 1420 – 1480. The term incunabula (Latin for “cradle”) is used to denote the earliest period of printing from its birth in 1450 up to January 1, 1501. The books, pamphlets and broadsides printed with the movable metal type method associated with Gutenberg during these first fifty years are also commonly called incunabulum.