General Arrowhead...Both hands move on same path...

Adam Frost adam at FROSTVILLAGE.COM
Wed Feb 14 21:16:41 UTC 2007


Wow! I did not know that I misunderstood that rule. I thought that the
general arrowhead was for when both hands move together as a unit.
(Probably like many others. Smile.) Now I think understand what the
rule mean. You said it is for when you would have two arrow
overlapping. So for the sign continue, the path (black and white
arrows) for each hand do not over lap, so the general arrowhead is not
used. Now my question is if you were to write continue from the side
view (purely hypertheotical of course), then the general arrow would
be used? And would that still be correct if the two hands were not
touching (ie as in the sign for way)? Just trying to see if I
understand this rule correctly. :-)

Adam


On 2/14/07, Valerie Sutton <signwriting at mac.com> wrote:
> SignWriting List
> February 14, 2007
>
> The General Arrowhead
> WHEN TWO MOVEMENT PATHS WRITE ON TOP OF EACH OTHER (BLEND)
>
> The Movement Path of the right hand, writes on top of the Movement
> Path of the left hand, creating a blend of the two arrows. This
> creates a General Arrowhead. The blended arrow is neither right nor
> left...it is both.
>
> Imagine placing your right hand in a can of black paint. It is now
> dripping with black paint.
>
> Imagine placing your left hand in a can of white paint. It is not
> dripping with white paint.
>
> Your two hands move in space. As they move, they paint Movement Paths
> in space. The left hand paints white Movement Paths. The right hand
> paints black Movement Paths.
>
> But what happens when the Right Movement Path paints on top of the
> Left Movement Path?
>
> In those cases, you write a General Arrowhead.
>
> The General Arrowhead never meant Parallel Paths. It always meant
> Blended Paths. There is a difference.
>
> I can show you examples later today....Unfortunately I have to go to
> an appointment again and must run!
>
> Talk to you all later -
>
> Val ;-)
>
>



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