Skip to content
Zintegra

Zintegra

Technology, systems, analytics, training

Posted on 10-21-201612-10-2018 by admin

How to learn Calligraphic






Share this:

  • Print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook

Like this:

Like Loading…
Categoriesdrawing TagsCalligraphic, pencil, Scribble, Script

Post navigation

Previous PostPrevious Calligraphy Tools
Next PostNext Hamid Reza Ebrahimi
  • Español
  • English
  • Français

Random Quote

Imíonn an tuirse ach fanann an tairbhe

Top Posts & Pages

  • Pseudonyms
  • Copyright
  • kill fees
  • Pilot parallel
  • Copperplate Calligraphy Alphabet
  • Letter writing in Madarasz Script
  • Hamid Reza Ebrahimi
  • How to learn Calligraphic
  • Calligraphy Tools
  • How To Use Pictorial Art With Calligraphy

Tags

  • brush pen
  • Caligraphy
  • Calligraphic
  • Calligraphy
  • Chloë Sevigny
  • Connie Willis
  • Copperplate
  • Copyright
  • Dogville
  • Eisegesis
  • English
  • Exegesis
  • film
  • Fountain Pen
  • Gothic Style
  • gun
  • Hamid Reza Ebrahimi
  • Hermeneutics
  • history
  • IAMPETH
  • internet
  • James Caan
  • journalism
  • Lauren Bacall
  • lingua
  • literatura
  • Nicole Kidman
  • novel
  • Paul Bettany
  • pencil
  • Pictorial Art
  • Pilot
  • Reference
  • Robert Devereux
  • science
  • science fiction
  • Scribble
  • Script
  • stand your ground
  • Stellan Skarsgård
  • Stephen King
  • Texas
  • thesaurus
  • Tools
  • Udo Kier

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Top Posts & Pages

  • Pseudonyms
  • Copyright
  • kill fees
  • Pilot parallel
  • Copperplate Calligraphy Alphabet
  • Letter writing in Madarasz Script
  • Hamid Reza Ebrahimi
  • How to learn Calligraphic
  • Calligraphy Tools
  • How To Use Pictorial Art With Calligraphy

Tags

  • brush pen
  • Caligraphy
  • Calligraphic
  • Calligraphy
  • Chloë Sevigny
  • Connie Willis
  • Copperplate
  • Copyright
  • Dogville
  • Eisegesis
  • English
  • Exegesis
  • film
  • Fountain Pen
  • Gothic Style
  • gun
  • Hamid Reza Ebrahimi
  • Hermeneutics
  • history
  • IAMPETH
  • internet
  • James Caan
  • journalism
  • Lauren Bacall
  • lingua
  • literatura
  • Nicole Kidman
  • novel
  • Paul Bettany
  • pencil
  • Pictorial Art
  • Pilot
  • Reference
  • Robert Devereux
  • science
  • science fiction
  • Scribble
  • Script
  • stand your ground
  • Stellan Skarsgård
  • Stephen King
  • Texas
  • thesaurus
  • Tools
  • Udo Kier

Recent Posts

  • Pseudonyms
  • Copyright
  • kill fees
  • Pilot parallel
  • Copperplate Calligraphy Alphabet

Recent Comments

  • Texas police excessive force against teenagers | The grokking eagle on Texa’s police
  • Lucía on Dogville Lars Von Trier
  • Rosa on Dogville Lars Von Trier
  • Mariquilla on Texa’s police
  • Mariquilla on Dogville Lars Von Trier

Archives

  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • July 2016
  • September 2015
  • March 2015

Categories

  • drawing
  • Musica
  • redacción
  • religión
  • United States
  • wikipedia
  • writing

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

Random Quote

Imíonn an tuirse ach fanann an tairbhe

Goodreads

RSS omnibus

  • Don Camillo
  • Les Bienveillantes
  • runes
  • ñ
  • scriptum
  • Jacques Brel - "Le Moribond"
  • roots of English
  • The Korean alphabet
  • IPA
  • Vedas

RSS The stone labyrinth

RSS Writing Academy

  • The Empty Room Test 06-24-2026
    When you want to show a character’s true self, send another character into their bedroom when they aren’t home; let the furniture do the talking. A page of explanation or a list of personality traits is cheap compared to what physical space reveals. What a person leaves behind when they walk out the door reveals... […]
    steve
  • Why Your Characters Shouldn’t Agree: The Power of Asymmetric Dialogue 06-23-2026
    Dialogue in a bad novel reads like a tennis match. One character hits the ball; the other hits it back. They answer each other’s questions, agree on the facts, and wait politely for their turn to speak. Real conversation is a traffic jam. Most people listen only to find a gap where they can insert... […]
    steve
  • Why Your Arguing Characters Need a Trapped Setting 06-22-2026
    Most dialogue scenes fall flat because the characters are too free to leave. When two people have an argument in a spacious living room, or while walking down a breezy park path, the tension leaks into the surrounding air. If the conversation gets too uncomfortable, one of them can simply walk away. That exit option... […]
    steve
  • Your Reader Won’t Believe Your Speculative World (Unless You Show the Grease) 06-21-2026
    Writers building unfamiliar worlds—whether a space station, an elven forest, or Victorian London—frequently drown the reader in architectural layouts and political histories. They want us to see the grand scale. But the human mind does not connect with grand scale; it connects with domestic friction. If your character walks into a room on a strange... […]
    steve
  • The Room Shift: How Setting Reveals Emotion 06-20-2026
    Most writers describe a room once, lock the details in place, and assume their job is done. But a physical space isn’t static; it is a mirror of your character’s mind. A bedroom is a cozy sanctuary when your protagonist is happy. That same bedroom becomes a claustrophobic prison when she is trapped. The desk,... […]
    steve
  • Why Phonetic Dialect is a Dialogue Trap 06-19-2026
    Spelling out regional accents phonetically on the page is a trap. If you write ‘gonna’ or ‘fella’ or try to spell out a thick Boston or Scottish accent letter by letter, you slow the reader down—and likely pull them right out of the story. The eye stumbles on creative spelling; the reader’s attention leaks away.... […]
    steve
  • Is Your Character Fighting on an Empty Stage? 06-18-2026
    Most action scenes fall flat because characters fight on a blank stage. We watch people run from danger in a generic hallway. We see physical action, but the environment remains invisible; the scene becomes a choreography of floating heads. You can fix this by treating setting as an active obstacle. The physical world must get... […]
    steve
  • The Silent Trap of Phone Conversations in Fiction 06-17-2026
    Most phone scenes in first drafts stall a novel’s momentum because characters are trapped in place, reciting dialogue easily replaced by a simple memo. The writer thinks they’re building tension; the reader is just watching two talking heads in separate rooms. The problem is isolation. On a call, we lose the visual chess of physical... […]
    steve
  • Why Your Dialogue Paragraphs Are Killing Tension 06-16-2026
    Most dialogue goes wrong because characters are allowed to finish their thoughts. Real people rarely do. If a character speaks for more than three sentences at a time, you aren’t writing a conversation—you’re writing an essay with quotation marks. In real life, people interrupt. They talk over each other. They stop mid-sentence because they realize... […]
    steve
  • Why Sunshine at a Funeral Hits Harder Than Rain 06-15-2026
    Rain at a funeral is a cliche. Sunshine at a funeral is a story. Most weather in fiction works like a mood ring—storm clouds when the character’s angry, sunshine when things go well. Readers barely notice it because it tells them nothing the scene itself didn’t already say. The trick is counterpoint. A couple having... […]
    steve

References

http://www.merriam-webster.com/ http://www.thesaurus.com/ http://www.apstylebook.com/ Guide to Grammar and Style http://labarker.com/sitemap.html#writing http://www.writersmarket.com/ scribendi ASJA Celtx
Proudly powered by WordPress
%d