Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Joh. Enschedé

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Type
  
Private company

Area served
  
European Community

Founder
  
Izaak Enschedé

Industry
  
Printing

Headquarters
  
Joh. Enschedé httpsstatic1squarespacecomstatic5513eaeee4b

Number of locations
  
Key people
  
Arie Piet, Chief Executive Officer

Products
  
Security documents, banknotes, stamps

Founded
  
1703, Haarlem, Netherlands

Subsidiaries
  
Drukkerij De Vroey-Peten Print BVBA

Royal Joh. Enschedé (Dutch: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé) is a printer of security documents, stamps and banknotes based in Haarlem, Netherlands. Joh. Enschedé specialises in print, media and security. The company hosted the Museum Enschedé until 1990 and has branches in Amsterdam, Brussels and Haarlem.

Contents

History

The company was founded in 1703, when Izaak Enschedé registered with the Printers Guild in Haarlem.

Joh. Enschedé has long been associated with the printing of banknotes; the company printed the "Robin" (Dutch Roodborstje), the very first Dutch banknote, in 1814. Since then, Joh. Enschedé has printed the banknotes of the State of the Netherlands. In 1866, after the death of Johannes Enschedé III, Joh. Enschedé sold the family's book collection and began printing stamps.

Typefounding

Enschedé began manufacturing type in 1743 after purchasing the foundry of Hendrik Wetstein, and the foundry soon became the most important part of Enschedé’s business. The famous punch-cutter Joan Michael Fleischman was employed there in the eighteenth century. Its type business flourished throughout the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and in the twentieth century the foundry achieved widespread international acclaim through the design and production of types of Jan van Krimpen. During the foundry type era, Enschedé types were distributed in the United States by Continental Type Founders Association.

Foundry typefaces

These foundry types were produced by Enschedér:

Enschedé produced many other typefaces with matrices from other typefoundries for handsetting:

Many Monotype faces were cast on Monotype machines and delivered to the customers.

Besides all this Enschedé offered in the 1968 character proof:

  • Monotype faces in small corpses:
  • Monophoto
  • Linotype
  • Baskerville, 11D, 10D, 9D, 8D
  • Spartan (typeface), 14D, 12D, 10D, 9pt, 8D, 6D
  • Times New Roman, 11D, 10D, 9D, 7D, 5,5D
  • Times New Roman Bold, 11D, 10D, 9D, 8D, 7D, 6D
  • Intertype faces.
  • Folio Grotesk 230, 12D, 10D, 9D, 8D, 6D
  • Folio Grotesk half bold 228, 12D, 10D, 9D, 8D, 6D
  • Anniversaries

    In 1893 for their 150th anniversary, a memorial book was commissioned called Enschedé gedenkschrift 1743-1893. The book was such a success that ten years later they decided to open a museum with artefacts from their archives, and in 1904 Museum Enschedé was founded in the old type foundry.

    In 1978, to celebrate their 275th anniversary, Enschedé commissioned Bram de Does, one of Holland’s leading typographers, to design a digital typeface specifically for phototypesetting. The result was Trinité, a face which clearly shows its provenance and which continues the tradition of type design established at Enschedé so many years before.

    During the celebrations for the company's 300th anniversary of Joh. Enschedé in 2003, the company received the designation "Royal" from Queen Beatrix.

    Services

    Today Joh. Enschedé specialises in security document design and printing (banknotes, postage stamps, parking permits, etc.), commercial print (annual reports, catalogues) and online document publication.

    The company is a certified Euro banknotes printer, and produces euro notes for five EU countries.

    Joh. Enschedé prints stamps for more than sixty countries.

    Controversies

    In 2016 reports emerged of the theft of 'a significant sum' of 50 euro notes at Joh. Enschedé during the course of two years. According to Dutch police, the theft was committed by several employees of the company.

    References

    Joh. Enschedé Wikipedia