Pierre Haultin (c. 1510 – 1587) was a French printer, publisher, punchcutter and typefounder. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
He was the nephew of the famous Parisian women printer Charlotte Guillard. [7] As a punchcutter, he may have been trained by Claude Garamont, who worked for Guillard. [7] He started his career as a typefounder, a woodcutter and a bookseller in Paris around 1545. [7]
A French Calvinist, Haultin left Paris for Lyon and Geneva in 1550, and then ran a printing office in La Rochelle from 1571 to 1587. [8] Haultin engraved many typefaces, including romans, italics, Greek and music type, which were widely used across Europe; his nephew Jerome Haultin lived in London from around 1568 and sold his types there. [9]
Pierre Haultin (c. 1510 – 1587) was a French printer, publisher, punchcutter and typefounder. [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]
He was the nephew of the famous Parisian women printer Charlotte Guillard. [7] As a punchcutter, he may have been trained by Claude Garamont, who worked for Guillard. [7] He started his career as a typefounder, a woodcutter and a bookseller in Paris around 1545. [7]
A French Calvinist, Haultin left Paris for Lyon and Geneva in 1550, and then ran a printing office in La Rochelle from 1571 to 1587. [8] Haultin engraved many typefaces, including romans, italics, Greek and music type, which were widely used across Europe; his nephew Jerome Haultin lived in London from around 1568 and sold his types there. [9]