[A footnote to the design of July 6, above]
Pencil drafts |
Final version, discussed July 6 |
- My own preference led me to choose "likened" because it seemed more eloquent than "compared."
- Wouldn't any woman be more flattered by "mare of Pharaoh's chariot" than a "whole company of horses." ?!
- And braided "ribbons of finest gold" seem more interesting to the mind's eye than simply "borders." I echoed those braids in the capital O's Celtic interlacings.
- I did not modernize "thee" and "thou" and "thy" for this design. They help to place it in the context of its era, so that the metaphor of the mare makes sense.
Once the text itself made sense to me, all I had to do with the design was trim down the swashes, slightly curve the diagonal lines, and play up the resemblance between the silhouettes of horse and woman.
Lesson: Save those thumbnail sketches! This design needed years to become clear to me. Don't give up after your first try, if you liked the initial idea.
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