Minchō typeface (明朝楷書, minchō-kaisho) is a category of typefaces used in printing Chinese characters. In Japanese text, Hiragana, Katakana, and the Latin alphabet are also used. Possessing variable line weight and characteristic decorations, called uroko or "fish scales" at the end of lines similar to serifs, minchō-style type is comparable to Western serif typefaces, as opposed to the Gothic styles. It is the most commonly used style in print. In Japan there are several variants of the Minchō style, such as the textbook style or the newspaper style.
Minchō type is characterised, among other things, by the following:
The name Minchō means Ming Dynasty, which was the era during which movable type printing (invented in the eleventh century) flourished in China, and during which Minchō-style type was first created. The creator of modern Japanese movable-type printing, Motoki Shōzō (or Motogi), modeled his sets of type after those prevailing in China, having learned an electrolytic method of type manufacturing from the American William Gamble in 1869. Motoki then created, based on Gamble's frequency studies of characters in the Chinese Bible, a full set of type with added Japanese characters.
Strictly speaking, only kanji are thus printed in Minchō type. However, modern type sets (that is, digital fonts) almost always include glyphs for kana script characters in a matching variable-line-width style, usually in a precise style imitating calligraphic handwriting with a brush. In its modern role comparable to that of western serif fonts, both kana and Roman glyphs are usually part of a complete type set.
There is some variation between the printed and handwritten forms of many kanji, especially in the orientation of smaller strokes and the shape of certain radicals. Some of these differences are persistent and specific to printed type (or even the minchō style), but others may be no more significant than variations between individual typefaces. None of these variations usually hinder reading. However, a special style of Minchō type (kyōkashotai or textbook type) matching the recommended handwritten forms is used in primary school textbooks, in order to prevent confusion among children learning kanji.
Well-known modern-day minchō typefaces include the Morisawa foundry's "Ryūbundō Minchō" (Ryūmin) as well as Adobe's "Kozuka Mincho" family, designed by Kozuka Masahiko (also creator of the popular gothic font "ShinGo").
In Korean, a similar category of typeface for the Korean alphabet hangul was called myeongjo (the Korean reading for the same Chinese characters "明朝") until recently, influenced by the Japanese term. A Ministry of Culture-sponsored standardization of typography terms in 1993 replaced myeongjo with batang, the Korean word for "foundation" or "ground" (as opposed to "figure"), and this is the term now current.
In Chinese, the same category of typeface has traditionally been called Songti (宋體). However, the name Mingti (明體) has relatively recently come under use, probably under the influence of the Japanese term Minchō.