Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Friday, December 27, 2013
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Monday, December 23, 2013
Sunday, December 22, 2013
301 Last minute projects
I just dashed these off. I think you can come up with a better O and S and X and Y. |
'Tis the season of last minute gift tags & thank-yous & place cards (and in my family, of coupons written out to stand in for the presents we thought up but didn't have time to shop for). Here are tomorrow's Pretty Caps to add eye appeal to your plain Italics.
I've given you leaf swashes on some of the strokes; I'm sure you can come up with other ways to add flourishes.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Friday, December 20, 2013
Thursday, December 19, 2013
298 Rose
Rose is built on the structure of Edelweiss. Note the mix of petal-shaped strokes with straight construction lines.
You'll find that this alphabet is most useful only a few letters at a time, since not all the letters fit the template comfortably. Single initials can be set on a stem, where you can add yesterday's little strokes to imitate thorns.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
296 Bookhand for type
I've been trying out one of my favorite calligraphy alphabets with an eye to turning it into a type face. It's making me look really hard at its structure, proportions, and stroke endings and try to analyze things I've been doing by instinct. Here's where I am currently, showing the 6th iteration .
Specs: Letter body 5 1/2 pen widths high. Speedball D nib, with line contrast of about 7 to 11. Pen angle 35°. Real size, 1 1/4" high. I've marked with pencil the areas I need to look at more carefully, things that will need adjusting to make a unified style and fit the letters together.
Specs: Letter body 5 1/2 pen widths high. Speedball D nib, with line contrast of about 7 to 11. Pen angle 35°. Real size, 1 1/4" high. I've marked with pencil the areas I need to look at more carefully, things that will need adjusting to make a unified style and fit the letters together.
Preview of tomorrow's alphabet. |
Monday, December 16, 2013
295 Poinsettia
Remember Leafy Green from last week? You can turn it into Poinsettia. Rinse out your pen and write these pointy italics with red ink to imply the Christmas-time flower. You can add a few green leaves, and make yellow dots to strengthen the illusion. And notice how to spell this often misspelled word.
Sunday, December 15, 2013
Christmas cards, conventional or innovative
Gothic letters are inspiring to design with. Their medieval flavor is closely identified with Christmas customs, which mainly came from Germany via 19th century England. But also, their abstract hexagonal shape helps them express creative contemporary calligraphic layouts.
The greetings above offer two different approaches: a conventional illuminated page with large capital and leafy border, or letters in white falling out of a midnight sky. You can experiment along the whole spectrum from the familiar to the unexpected.
The greetings above offer two different approaches: a conventional illuminated page with large capital and leafy border, or letters in white falling out of a midnight sky. You can experiment along the whole spectrum from the familiar to the unexpected.
Labels:
Calligraphy design,
Calligraphy Every Day,
Gothic,
Gothic illumination,
Holiday calligraphy,
Illusions
Saturday, December 14, 2013
Friday, December 13, 2013
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
291 Elf
Elf is just a simple nod to "It's Christmas!" Use basic outlined Gothic letters and fill the upper half with green, using a brush or pen. Let it dry completely. Wash out your brush or pen. Then fill in the lower half of the letters with green.
You could add a gold dot to where the colors meet. Let's make that modification tomorrow:
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
Monday, December 9, 2013
289 Flora
Flora is a softer view of yesterday's Flower Box. Like that alphabet, it is shown here in letter families to help you understand its structure.
I first started designing this alphabet for a friend's landscape architecture firm; her initials MB lent themselves to being merged into one little character and then repeated. The green color at right adds to the feeling of leaf and petal.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Fly casual
This little gem shows what you can do to include calligraphy in your life. Instead of just clicking "reply" to send an RSVP to a party, my friend Allison whipped out a marker, wrote this message on mica, and mailed it in the mail. What a treasure! It's going onto the Christmas tree shortly, and will become a real heirloom as well as a classroom example of enjoying the moment.
Don't get too fussy about letters. Just write them, by hand, whenever you can.
Saturday, December 7, 2013
288 Flower Box
Flower Box is a hard alphabet to just sit down and write. I've broken it into letter groups, but even then, many of the letters don't really lend themselves to the overall principle of squaring off the circle, breaking each side into two strokes, and fitting them together with precision. You'll probably want to do some of them differently.
I find that I use this alphabet occasionally in a short word or logo.
I find that I use this alphabet occasionally in a short word or logo.
Friday, December 6, 2013
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
286 Back slant Gothic
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
285 Very Skinny Coopy
1. Penstrokes at 0° |
2. Penstrokes at 0° and at 45° |
3. Penstrokes at 0° and 45° and 90°. As usual, Z is a special case. |
Monday, December 2, 2013
284 Simple gifts
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Simple gifts
It's the first morning of Advent, when we count down the days until Christmas. NOT just the shopping days! Many people spend a lot of energy, love, time, and money on the search for gifts to give; maybe too much sometimes.
Over the next four Sundays--along with all the carols, scripture, and poems--let's keep in mind the Shaker hymn "Simple Gifts." Words are the simplest but most precious gift we can give, and as calligraphers we have a way to gift wrap our nicest words and present them to the people who mean most to us.
This month is a good time to give words as gifts, through holiday cards, pretty gift tags, personal notes, favorite quotes. One Christmas I gave everyone note pads with their names written in calligraphy. You could put names on cookies (see Frosting, January 27) or make personal decorated signs for a bedroom door.
Over the next four Sundays--along with all the carols, scripture, and poems--let's keep in mind the Shaker hymn "Simple Gifts." Words are the simplest but most precious gift we can give, and as calligraphers we have a way to gift wrap our nicest words and present them to the people who mean most to us.
This month is a good time to give words as gifts, through holiday cards, pretty gift tags, personal notes, favorite quotes. One Christmas I gave everyone note pads with their names written in calligraphy. You could put names on cookies (see Frosting, January 27) or make personal decorated signs for a bedroom door.
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