Lettering and Caligraphy
Lettering and Caligraphy
Lettering and Caligraphy
Calligraphy
Outline
✗ Definition
✗ Lettering
✗ Calligraphy
✗ Kinds, styles of lettering
✗ Parts and elements of letters
✗ Stability of letters
✗ Lettering tools
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? Lettering vs.
Calligraphy
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Definition
What is Lettering?
Lettering has many things in common
with calligraphy, but ultimately it
distinguishes itself as a form of
illustration.
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These styles emerged with modern
marketing, appearing on billboard text,
and painted advertising on the sides of
walls.
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Lettering has fewer rules than
calligraphy for how artists use
particular scripts or styles.
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Nonetheless, most hand-lettering artists
prefer to keep their designs readable
and balanced.
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Lettering artists also commonly use
rulers to keep their lines straight, or to
create accurate grids, mirroring, and
perspectives.
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1.1 Most Popular
Lettering Styles
- Faux
- Graphic Design
- Chalk Lettering
Faux Calligraphy
creating a calligraphy-like style with a normal pen or art tool.
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Faux Calligraphy
To begin with faux calligraphy, first, write the word, the go
back over the letters to thicken the downstrokes.
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Faux Calligraphy
Faux calligraphy is very flexible, as it allows artists to correct
the shape of the letters and flourishes.
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Graphic Design
many designs and designers begin lettering on paper before
they take it to the digital screen.
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Chalk Lettering
Chalk Lettering is a fun and popular trend among hand-
letterers.
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Chalk Lettering
It uses a chalkboard for experimentation with composition and
different lettering styles.
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Chalk Lettering
the use of chalk allows artists to get really nice contrasts and
shading that other media have a difficult time accomplishing.
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2
Calligraphy
Familiar?
Calligraphy
Ancient art form
it has long been used for
decorating or writing
religious texts, poetry, and
other important documents
from many cultures all
across the globe.
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Calligraphy
Ancient art form
This includes, but isn't
limited to, Arabic, Chinese,
Indian, and Western styles of
calligraphy.
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Traditional Western
calligraphy typically uses
the Latin alphabet.
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Traditional Western
Over time, these base
hands have been tweaked
and restyled into
numerous styles and
modern calligraphic
scripts.
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Calligraphy
practiced with oblique or straight dip pens, and suitable nib
attachments, ink for dip pens, such as India ink, brushes
and brush pens, or parallel pens.
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Calligraphy
Most calligraphy is learned by the rote practice of different styles
and hands. It relies on disciplined practice and muscle memory.
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Calligraphy
calligraphy generally requires simple, smooth lines practiced in
learned fluid strokes.
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2.1 Most Popular
Calligraphy Styles
Traditional Scribal
Hands typically
emphasize thick or broad
downstrokes thin,
sometimes wispy,
upstrokes.
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Traditional Scribal
Hands Traditional
Western calligraphy,
particularly the elegantly
scrolling copperplate
calligraphy, is almost
always practiced using a
dip pen.
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Modern Calligraphy
Modern calligraphy has
become a blanket term for
any kind of calligraphy
that isn't considered one
of the traditional
calligraphic hand.
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Modern Calligraphy
Modern calligraphy
allows for
experimentation, allowing
calligraphers to diverge
from traditional
calligraphy rules, by
mixing and matchings
letter and flourish styles.
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Brush Lettering
Brush pens have been on
the rise for their
accessibility.
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Brush Lettering
Brush calligraphy is a
form of modern
calligraphy, except that,
rather than using a
flexible nib, brush pens
use flexible brush or
marker tips.
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Brush Lettering
these brush pens have
been more traditionally
used for Chinese and
Japanese calligraphy
styles.
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3 Kinds and Styles of
Lettering
Traditional Calligraphy
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Modern calligraphy
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Modern calligraphy
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Modern calligraphy
Serifs are the small lines or marks added to the ends of letters in
certain typography styles.
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Serif lettering
These tapers are sometimes called “tails” or “feet” and can lend a
more formal look to your lettering.
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Serif lettering
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Sans serif lettering
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Sans serif lettering
Styles like monoline (where lines are all the same weight) and
block letters (where the letters never connect or touch) fall into
this category.
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New lettering styles
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New lettering styles
Current events impact design, so always keep an eye out for new
fonts and lettering styles that arise with the times to stay on trend.
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4 Parts and Elements
of Letters
Characters
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Characters
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Characters
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Characters
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Characters
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Special Character
A. Pi characters
Math signs
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Special Character
A. Pi characters
Punctuation marks
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Special Character
A. Pi characters
Accented characters
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Parts of a Letter
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Parts of a Letter
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Parts of a Letter
Leg
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Parts of a Letter
ARM
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Parts of a Letter
ARM
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Parts of a Letter
EAR
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Parts of a Letter
SHOULDER
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Parts of a Letter
SPINE
The spine is the main curved stroke inside the upper and lower
case S.
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Parts of a Letter
TAIL
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A. X-height
It measures the height of all lowercase letters that are part of the same
typeface.
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A. X-height
X-heights vary among typefaces in the same point size and strongly
effect readability and gray value of text blocks.
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A. X-height
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B. Cap Height
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E. Stem
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G. Bar
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H. Serif
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H. Serif
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H. Serif
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I. Terminal
When a letter doesn’t have a serif, the end of the stroke is called a
terminal.
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J. Bowl
A spur is a small projection that veers off the main stroke on many
capital G’s.
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O. Tracking
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Q. Stress
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R. Bracket
Brackets serifs with cupped bases.
Unbracketed serifs.
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S.Contrast
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S.Contrast
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Stability of letters
General Proportions
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General Proportions
Not only are the widths of the different letters in the same alphabet
very unequal, but different alphabets vary in their "measure," some
being tall and narrow, others short and wide.
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General Proportions
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General Proportions
A letter corning to a sharp point at the guideline will appear smaller than its
companions. The point may either be extended over the line or cut off
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Lettering Tools
Common Used Tools
✗ Pencil/Lead Holder
✗ Erasers
✗ Good Quality paper
✗ Ruler
✗ Compass
✗ Ink Pen
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Done
Any questions?
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Up
Next!
✗ TASK A –
Lettering/Calligraphy
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