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 ...
People often ask Dani Kreeft if stationery is going the way of the fax. But she says it has only become more meaningful in a world of Facebook invites, emails and Snapchat.
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 ...
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 ...
Florence… birthplace of the Renaissance – the most glorious period of art in history – and home to the marble-encrusted Santa Maria del Fiore cathedral and the ...
Q. For you, calligraphy is ‘an expressive medium where letters, in all their nakedness become alive, vibrating, pulsating with their inherent shapes.’ Is Kitta another expression of your love for the ...
An Indiana Department of Education report due this Friday may add fuel to the debate for the return of compulsory cursive writing instruction at Hoosier public and charter elementary schools. Or, it ...