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First Paperbacks
Edward Young's design for the first ten
covers of the newly established reprint series in July 1935
proved to be more than just a sensible response to the demand
for cheap, effective layout. The combination of Gill Sans-Serif
Bold, broad colour bands and convenient size was to become
the formula which Penguin would keep for its fiction titles
until the early fifties, and its ghost would haunt even later
reforms.
Good typefaces, based on the classical
faces of the Renaissance and seventeenth and eighteenth centuries,
had been made available for machine composition increasingly
during the 1920s by the work of Beatrice Warde and Stanley
Morison at the Monotype Corporation. Instilled with the principles
of the Arts and Crafts reform movement, which had their earlier
impact on the private presses, the revision of old types was
complemented by the commission of new faces. In this way Eric
Gill had been asked to translate to a typeface Edward Johnston's
sign lettering, seen since 1916 on the stations of the London
Underground. For the texts, the first Penguins made use of
Stanley Morison's Times New Roman of 1931. Therefore, as they
appeared in the first series of ten, the books had a happy
combination of novelty and familiarity: they evoked something
fresh and modern, while not being so rarefied or 'moderne'
as to discourage the customer from picking them up.
Richard Hoggart has analysed his initial
reaction:
"Just why
Penguins were able to enlist this degree of enthusiasm - and
to command a kind of loyalty - is worth teasing out. They
were very cheap of course and attractively presented - they
looked neither meretriciously glossy nor ponderously dull.
They gave us the chance to own, say, some good contemporary
novels and essays .... whereas before we had been almost confined
to secondhand copies of older writers."

Richard Hoggart: 'The Reader', Penguins Progress 1935-1960,
Penguin Books, 1960.
Hoggart isolates the books' cheapness
and contemporaneity as two important features which attracted
him and would determine their success. They were aspects which
the rest of the publishing world had forecast as their potential
undoing. However, Allen Lane was convinced that his estimate
of the likely market and the quantity of reprints that would
be needed was right. Hoggart at this time was a sixteen-year-old
grammar school boy in a provincial town. His interest in such
a series symbolizes a reaction against Edwardian culture and
the stuffiness and insularity in which he had grown up.
In terms of design, Allen Lane acknowledged
the influence of German reprint series. Many of the characteristics
of Penguin's design were already evident in the Albatros series
of reprints. Albatros books, themselves based on the Tauchnitz
editions of Leipzig started in 1842, were founded in Hamburg
in 1932 by J.Holroyd-Reece, Max Christian Wegner and Kurt
Enoch. Albatros had been the first to colour-code their series
by genre - blue for love stories, green for travel, orange
for novels and short stories and so on. The size (181 x 111
mm) was based on the requirements of standardized production,
but also happens to relate approximately to the Golden Section,
a feature which was to satisfy designers for Penguin throughout
its subsequent developments. Albatros, like Penguin, had typographical
covers with the title in sans-serif capitals and made a feature
of their bird colophon. The typographer was Hans (Giovanni)
Madersteig, who produced a well-spaced, evenly toned page,
in contrast to Tauchnitz's rather badly crowded page.
At first Penguin books were produced
with dust-jackets covering the paperback covers. They also
included a description of the author and a small photograph,
initially inside of the dust-jacket, then on the rear cover.
The look of Penguins was partly determined
by the facilities the printer could provide and partly by
the specifications of the production team. In the early years,
design fell into the sphere of production, with Edward Young,
Bob Maynard and John Overton, as successive Production Managers,
devising layouts and making decisions about typography. The
separation of design from production and then cover artwork
from typography at Penguin reflected broader changes which
acknowledges the growth of the graphic design profession in
Britain which was to accelerate after 1945.
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