Calligraphy, which means “beautiful writing” in Ancient Greek, is seeing a surge of interest from younger people who say it offers a meditative and creative escape. Credit... Supported by By Jenny ...
The history of calligraphy—the art of handwriting as a medium of expression beyond the meaning of words themselves—could be generically traced to the earliest found symbols. There was a time when ...
Hidden in the bylanes of KR Market, a calligraphy museum is a world away from its chock-a-block surroundings. "The way children are taught to write cursive is why so many of us face the problem of ...
Keeping cursive from becoming a lost art These days, our texting and typing are top-notch but the Bow Valley Calligraphy Guild wants to see handwriting make a comeback.
No matter where you look, it seems like boomers can’t stop griping about the lack of cursive writing; kids today don’t do this, they don’t do that, and most egregiously of all, they don’t loop their ...
A Tulsa woman, Linda Shrewsbury, has developed a cursive curriculum called Cursive Logic to revive cursive writing in schools, particularly after its removal from federal standards in 2010. TULSA, ...