UNDERSTANDING MOLECULAR TYPOGRAPHY by H.F. Henderson & Woody Leslie

$ 12.00 $ 20.00

Understanding Molecular Typography is now available as an E-Book (choose "e-book" above). **Please note: if you choose the e-book option, a file will be sent to you within 24 hours of your purchase. If you haven't received a file after 24 hours, please follow up with office@uglyducklingpresse.org.

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Molecular typography is the study of the chemical and physical underpinnings of letters. All characters are formed from seven basic atomic building blocks, known as typtoms. These typtoms come together in various combinations and configurations to form letters, numbers, and punctuation. Typtoms are not just theoretical tools for exploring the anatomy of type, but actual particles. Letters are molecules.

H.F. Henderson’s work, Understanding Molecular Typography, originally published in 1992, was a seminal work in the field. By condensing information pulled from nearly forty years of publications from the top molecular typographic scientists, Henderson made the science approachable to the everyday American for the first time. Part primer, part field guide, it lays out the basic principles, followed by detailed diagrams of the molecular formation of letters, numbers, and punctuation. A conclusion sums up the field of molecular typography to date, and a comprehensive bibliography provides valuable reference for the reader looking to learn more.

With the demise of the field of molecular typography as a whole in the mid-to-late ‘90s, (perhaps even due to its increased popularity brought on by Henderson’s work), Understanding Molecular Typography ran out of print, and has long since been forgotten. Peculiar as it may be, molecular typography is nevertheless a science worthy of being brought back to mainstream attention, if for no other reason than demonstrating humanity’s frequent scientific misconceptions throughout history. This reprint edition, with a new introduction by Woody Leslie, seeks to do just that.


"Until Henderson's incredible analysis, no one had created a conceptual framework sophisticated enough to do the analytic work in graphical physics that the alphabet required if it was to be fully understood. True, some of the Russian futurists, like Ilia Zdanevich, in their examinations of the properties of language, had begun to grasp the vague outlines of a modern scientific approach to molecular components, to the formation of compounds, and their behavior as chemical substances, within the structure of poetics. But Henderson's research was comprehensive and the results nothing short of astonishing."

— Johanna Drucker


Woody Leslie is an artist, writer, and bookbinder, born and raised in northern Vermont. He is the author of several artist’s books, including Words & Vegetables (Large Home Tiny Idea), Parsely (Large Home Tiny Idea), and the digital book Courier’s Text Atlas of the United States of America (UDP). His work has been exhibited across the country, and held in the collections of various institutions including the Brooklyn Museum, the Newbury Library, and Yale University among many others. He has worked for the Journal of Artists’ Books, Ugly Duckling Presse, and taught book arts classes and workshops in various locations.

H.F. Henderson is a renowned American linguist, scholar of the English language, and molecular typographic enthusiast. Other works by Henderson include Further Inspirations of the Interrobang (One Page Productions), Henderson’s Concise Illustrated English Dictionary (One Page Productions), and The Structural Anthropology of Typtoms (Radial).