Showing posts with label calligraphy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label calligraphy. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Flex

OK, here's a rule: don't try and write with a flex-nib fountain pen in one hand, while trying to film the action with your cell phone in the other hand!

Not the best video quality (grainy, low light, subject not centered, etc) but I think it gets the idea across!

Techie details:
  • Pen = 100-year old A.A. Waterman eyedropper fountain pen with gold semi-flex nib
  • Paper = Clairefontaine 90 g/cm2 Seyes-ruled (bought in Clermont-Ferrand)
  • Ink = Private Reserve Dakota Red.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Turquoise

Here's another little calligraphy project...
  • Pen: 1915-ish Arthur A Waterman eyedropper flex-nib fountain pen
  • Ink: Pelikan Turquoise
  • Paper: Clairefontaine Seyes-ruled
  • Quote: Christian missionary Jim Elliot, who gave his life for the cause of the Gospel

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Handwriting

Do you remember your grades in elementary school? The only two I can seem to remember are the worst two.

In first grade, I got a "U" (unsatisfactory, like an "F") in music. Why? Well, our old-lady teacher made us stand in a circle, boy-girl-boy-girl, and skip in a circle to some fruity old-fashioned music. I wasn't real big on holding hands with girls in first grade, so while skipping I gave the girl in front of me a good soccer kick in the posterior. That earned me a trip to the principal's office, a good spanking at home, and a U for the class that quarter.

The other bad grade I remember in elementary school was a "C" in handwriting. Try as I might, in third grade I just could not get my pencil to make letters that looked like the ones on that chart above the chalkboard. My cursive back then was kind of ugly, and it never got a whole lot better.

Well, thirty some years later, I have decided I'd like to improve my penmanship. Practically speaking, this makes absolutely no sense. After all, in our modern computer age, the skill of writing by hand has paled in comparison to the skill of typing on a keyboard. Penmanship was a valued skill in our grandparents' day, but no more.

Maybe its the "art" phase I'm gonig through. Maybe its a throwback to my calligraphy skills I tried to learn as a kid. Maybe its somehow related to my fondness for fountain pens. I don't know what it is, but I'm inspired.

Here's the story of my handwriting:



And now...


And there you have it. I'll keep you posted on my progress. Hopefully soon my writing will look like this or even this!