The 19th-century French Clarendon, with its unorthodox reversed stress, never achieved the versatility of its Victorian siblings: the slab-serif Antique and the sans-serif Grotesque.
In Trilby, David Jonathan Ross reined in this topsy-turvy style, cultivating its formal essence. Unburdened of excess ornamentation, Trilby transcends mere novelty as a wholly useful contemporary design with offbeat charm and subtle wit.
Among other uses, Trilby is recommended for Magazine use.