John Baskerville is considered to be one of the most influential printers in history and has been very successful in the printing and printing world. It was considered a printing failure in his life, but when we talked about typographic printing and development of printing, he created some of the work we saw today. The impact of prints on other well-known printers such as Bodoni, Didot, Benjamin Franklin, Basqueville was hostile in the British Isles. Baskerville is not just a printer, but an artist, a printer and a mason.
John Baskerville was a British businessman born in Walfley, Worcestershire on January 28, 1706. When he grew up, he envied the notion of writing a letter. With passion for the letter, he became a skilled tombstone mason in 1723 and became a writing teacher. By 1726 he moved to Birmingham, England and became a master writing teacher. In 1737 he opened a school in the bullring of Birmingham. Since Basqueville is the center of the historic market in Birmingham, hence it is known as "the city of thousands of cities", he chose the bullring as a wonderful place. This will help him continue teaching his secretary and continue his work as a mason, and
John Hatfield was born in Helmut Hezfeld from 1891 to 1968. He is a German optical expert, draft man, screenwriter and stage designer John Hatfield, and his brothers and sisters were abandoned by their parents. Mother, political activist, and his father, socialist writer had to escape from Germany to avoid persecution of their political beliefs. Children are raised by relatives and institutions. From 1907 to 1911, John Hartfield studied art at the König museum in Munich, specializing in poster design. In the summer of 1916, Germany punished England using the aggressive nationalist slogan "Gott Strafe England" or "May God". This angry Helmut protested by changing the name to John Hatfield.