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Sébastien Truchet

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Nationality
  
France

Died
  
5 February 1729, France

Name
  
Sebastien Truchet

Institutions
  
France under Louis XIV

Sébastien Truchet Pre Sbastien Truchet

Known for
  
Proportion of typefaces, plane tiling, sundials, channels, weapons

Influenced
  
Pierre Simon Fournier, François-Ambroise Didot, Giambattista Bodoni

Fields
  
Mathematics, Hydraulics, Graphics, Typography

Similar
  
Pierre Simon Fournier, Giambattista Bodoni, Typography

Father Sebastian Truchet (French: Père Sébastian Truchet, 1657 – 5 February 1729), born Jean Truchet, was a French Dominican priest born in Lyon, who lived under the reign of Louis XIV. He was active in areas such as mathematics, hydraulics, graphics, typography, and for many inventions.

Contents

Biography

Sébastien Truchet httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Truchet was born in 1657. In 1693, he was selected by Abbé Bignon to assist his commission investigating the feasibility of compiling a description of all France's artistic and industrial processes for the minister Colbert. For his assistance, he was named an honoraire of the French Royal Academy in 1699.

Death

Truchet died on 5 February 1729, with the Descriptions of the Arts and Trades still incomplete.

Contributions

Sébastien Truchet Sebastien Truchet and his tilings Morphing Tilings

Alongside the royal typographer Jacques Jaugeon, Truchet studied the proportions of typefaces using the French line (112 French inch), a measurement derived from silversmithing. The commission then invented the first typographic point, using minute fractions of the line to create a bitmap that could be used to mathematically describe and italicize metal type. Their system had unnecessarily great precision relative to the accuracy with which fonts could actually be cut. Further, it did not match the sizes of the fonts then in use. Fournier subsequently corrected these failings, using a larger point with greater compatibility with existing forms of type.

Sébastien Truchet Truchet stories3 Tiling systems

The commission also designed the Romain du Roi ("King's Roman"), which influenced Philippe Grandjean and through him the popular Times New Roman fonts. Other typographic innovations in the work of the commission involved the use of both bitmap and vector representations of letter shapes, tabulations of font metrics, and oblique font faces.

Sébastien Truchet Sebastien Truchet and his tilings Morphing Tilings

In 1699, at the second public meeting of the French Academy, Truchet spoke on the motion of falling bodies, and nearly 20 years later he was one of several scientists to confirm Newton's model of the separation of white light into colors.

As a hydraulics expert, he designed most of the French canals.

Sébastien Truchet combinaisons at light matters

Inspired by decorations he had seen on the canals, Truchet studied decorative patterns on ceramic tiles. One particular pattern that he studied involved square tiles split by a diagonal line into two triangles, decorated in contrasting colors. By placing these tiles in different orientations with respect to each other, as part of a square tiling, Truchet observed that many different patterns could be formed. This model of pattern formation was later taken up by Fournier, and is now known to mathematicians and designers as Truchet tiling.

Sébastien Truchet Sebastien Truchet Wikipedia

He is also known for his expertise as a watchmaker, and for his inventions concerning sundials, weapons and tools for transplanting large trees within the Versailles gardens.

References

Sébastien Truchet Wikipedia