Calligraphy

Paligraphy is the art of handwritten calligraphy. The manuscript is beautiful because it is unique. The word “text” is one of the first things kids learn when they go to school, and translated from Latin it means “fabric.” Calligraphy differs from calligraphy in that each new word begins on a new line, and there are intervals between words. Calligraphic text has a different character. The melody of the phrase does not in all cases coincide with the melody of the letters. And the greater the distance from the melody of the line, the slower the pronounced phrase. But the most important thing about a manuscript is its inner speech. Here the inner voice is involved in deciphering the manuscript. It does not appear to you as a simple set of letters, lines, strokes! A manuscript is a living organism, the consciousness of its owner-creator. Look at calligraphy as the structure of existence itself. You and your manuscript are parts of the same world. The ideas of the ancient Roman philosopher Marcus Aurelius penetrated deeply into the essence of calligraphic writing. Here are a few such statements: “True teaching, when well written, is the best of sciences; good teaching of writing is superior to gymnastic exercises.” “When a student is able to understand the truth to the highest degree, he can be called truly learned.”

The manuscript should not look like printed text. In all types of texts there is a pace and energy of reading. Each written letter, each squiggle and each line carries out a certain meaning. Each curl plays its role. In life, periods of activity and calm sometimes alternate, but complete passivity never occurs. Likewise, calligraphic handwriting is a dynamic whole. That is why, to achieve results, they use a wide variety of unrelated styles of calligraphy: conventional, Mediterranean script, Italian cursive, French cursive fonts, German Gothic, New European fonts and fonts of the calligraphic school of the peoples of Eastern Europe.

When writing, the main thing on a piece of paper is the sign. I know