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VII
To summarise, although this kind of evidence requires a tedious searching of sample texts, the section of a font composite which indicates the kind and proportion of replenished abnormal letters and resident foul-case letters and punctuation is a potent tool for distinguishing same-face fonts. Mutually exclusive clusters of these letters usually provide adequate evidence of the identities of such fonts.[65] Fortunately, much of this evidence can be found in high quality reproductions since it consists of obvious classes of letters and marks. However, it must be approached with an awareness of the manner in which the ease of purging and compositorial intention is affected by the class of letter. Otherwise, confusion can result about the distinction between transient and resident fouling. Thus the interpretation of obvious foul-case italic capitals and punctuation, black letter punctuation, and small capitals
As implied in the preceding discussion, the recurrence patterns exhibited by resident clusters suggests an obvious relevance of this kind of evidence to compositorial and presswork analysis, but the subject as a whole is beyond the scope of this paper, needs further investigation, and will be addressed later. However, the implications of recurrent patterns of resident fouling should be briefly noted in regard to the common practice of inferring the method and order of setting, and distribution points, from type shortages and substitutions. The simple fact that resident wrong-face types tend to recur in clusters argues against viewing them as repetitive acts of fouling unless the history of the font shows that these appearances result from transient fouling during the setting of the particular text in question. Given the varying demands of a text upon the variety of sorts in a wrong-face cluster, the odds against recurrent shortages that require the same limited set of substitutions in a sequence of gatherings must be astronomical. For example, this is tantamount to claiming that the text of Mal Q1 required substitutions of the S-face 'G O D' part of the resident cluster first on B3, then again on D1. Unless the distinction between transient and resident fouling and the principle of randomness is borne in mind, the locations of appearances of foul-case letters can be tortured into supporting any plausible explanation of the order of
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