anotheranon (
anotheranon) wrote2005-08-31 08:46 pm
sharing more book love
Found this online course course in medieval/early modern handwriting, which includes an online version of (at least part of) The Pen's Excellencie, a 17th century handwriting manual that includes alphabets in Italic (looks a lot like modern script) and Secretary (looks like modern script only at first glance).
Why this matters to me: Picked up English Handwriting 1400-1650 a few months ago and though I'm almost finished, I'm still having difficulty reading the Secretary samples. I can't figure out whether this is because the folio samples in the book have such tiny reproduced script (I've been using a magnifying glass) or because the writers just had crap handwriting - so, I'm looking for more samples.
Why learn this? Why not?
Why this matters to me: Picked up English Handwriting 1400-1650 a few months ago and though I'm almost finished, I'm still having difficulty reading the Secretary samples. I can't figure out whether this is because the folio samples in the book have such tiny reproduced script (I've been using a magnifying glass) or because the writers just had crap handwriting - so, I'm looking for more samples.
Why learn this? Why not?
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Come to think of it, I have a CD of Renaissance English document photos... I should see if there's something to practice on there...
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Best reason in the entire universe! :-)
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no subject
The lower case "h" has a descender, which can be jarring until you get used to it, because it appears so often ("the", "which", "there" etc.)