Job Clarendon is a typeface that pays homage to job printing — display-heavy designs made for posters and flyers in the heyday of letterpress printing. It seeks to underscore that the visual language of job printing is just as vital today as it was then. It was designed by Bethany Heck and David Jonathan Ross with additional drawing by Sophia Tai. This interpretation of the Clarendon style focuses on the style’s adaptability, taking it both thinner and heavier than most of its nineteenth-century exemplars dared to go. Throughout this expansive range, Job Clarendon maintains its dense charm, with chunky slab serifs, ample ball terminals, and square-terminal alternates. Throughout this expansive range, Job Clarendon maintains its dense charm, with chunky slab serifs, ample ball terminals, and square-terminal alternates.