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GSR & CIE station nameboards

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jhb171achill

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 5/5/2024 at 3:41 PM, GSWR 90 said:

Don’t suppose anyone has a list of the letters in English and seanchló/Irish used by the GSR on its running in boards, or know the name of a similar font?

I found a free font online at fonts4free.net called Celtic Gaelige (note incorrect spelling) which is close.

Available to download free. I have no connection except as a user of this font.

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On 5/5/2024 at 3:41 PM, GSWR 90 said:

Don’t suppose anyone has a list of the letters in English and seanchló/Irish used by the GSR on its running in boards, or know the name of a similar font?

The GSR appeared to have used an upper case "B" (like a Latin B) on nameboards, some free fonts don't have this character.

 

20240513_154707.jpg

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9 hours ago, jhb171achill said:

The font style in the English version is also highly unusual.

At a guess, maybe it was a sample from a sign manufacturer that was never actually installed? The enamel around the fixing holes isn't chipped.

The wording is unusual too, a station having roadside parking, but important enough to have a dedicated attendant?

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2 hours ago, minister_for_hardship said:

At a guess, maybe it was a sample from a sign manufacturer that was never actually installed? The enamel around the fixing holes isn't chipped.

The wording is unusual too, a station having roadside parking, but important enough to have a dedicated attendant?

Indeed. Probably somewhere in Dublin or Cork, well outside actual railway premises.

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  • 4 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Someone mentioned to me that the English font for GSR running-in boards is Gill sans or something very similar to it. The Irish is in bunchló GC, which seems to have been a pretty standard + very gorgeous seanchló from the 19th century. It, or something similar to it, seems to have been used in at least some CIÉ carriage signs until the 1950s. You can download it here at gaelchlo.com, along with keyboard extensions which allow you to use poncanna séimhithe and other interesting things – e.g. ṁ, ı, and ⁊. There are several stylistic sets included in the font, including new and old versions of the tironian et, as well as new and old versions of 's' (ſ) and 'r' (ɼ). You don't need a licence to use the font to write in a Celtic language.

Here are some samples:

 

 

Screenshot 2024-06-09 at 00.20.17.png

Edited by GSWR 90
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