The 27th Letter
Back in March we shared the news that The Book Collector, the celebrated journal established by Ian Fleming, was holding a competition to find The 27th Letter.
In 1947, while helping his friend Robert Harling at the typographical magazine Alphabet and Image, Ian Fleming conceived the idea of a competition for the best interpretation of a twenty-seventh letter of the English alphabet.
This year, 70 years later, Fleming’s nephews decided to reinstate this competition in The Book Collector, and after receiving over 2500 entries, the winner was announced at London International Antiquarian Book Fair at Olympia on 2 June.
The competition was judged by Phil Cleaver, designer of The Book Collector and Professor in the Creative Industries at Middlesex University, James Fergusson, Editor of The Book Collector, Fergus Fleming, writer and co-publisher at Queen Anne Press, and Lilian Lindblom-Smith, Head of Graphic Design at Middlesex University.
In the end, it was David Guthrie who captured the judges imagination, winning £250 and a beautiful trophy book designed by Phil Cleaver. The winning entry?
David Guthrie
© David Guthrie
That’s right, the winning entry is lol. Injecting a little more humour into the alphabet as we know it!