Handwriting course Stefans homework

Ingvild Roald iroald at HOTMAIL.COM
Sun Jan 14 15:36:50 UTC 2007


Personally, I used a block of ruled paper - 0.5 cm squares - for my tryouts. 
I used 2 of the squares for the with of the hand symbol, and wrote about a 
full page of each symbol until I felt comfortable with the strokes and the 
look. - Look forward to Val's comment of the way my symbols look, she may 
not be entirely pleased, maybe .... Well, I am back at being a student, and 
then the teacher is the boss ...

As for the two open lines fot the flat hand in bird's perspective - maybe it 
would feel better if we kept the bottom, and just let the top off?

And as for the arrows - mostly, I would say they do not matter, but if you 
let the arrowstem go all the way up to the tip for the right hand, and not 
for the left, you do get a distiction

Ingvild




>From: "Stefan Wöhrmann"<stefanwoehrmann at GEBAERDENSCHRIFT.DE>
>Reply-To: sw-l at majordomo.valenciacc.edu
>To: sw-l at majordomo.valenciacc.edu
>Subject: [sw-l] Handwriting course  Stefans homework
>Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2007 10:09:32 +0100
>
>Hi Valerie – sw-listmembers – participants of the SW Handwriting course –
>
>
>
>attached you find page 8  - homework of this Handwriting course
>
>
>
>Hi Valerie – here are my comments while I tried to follow your advice :
>
>
>
>1)       I asked myself – thinking of my students and of me when I had been
>a 6 year old boy – does it make sense to write carefully and slowly in the
>beginning instead of just focus on speed?
>
>At my age – speed is not my first interest in Handwriting – but rather the
>option to be able to take notes in a reasonable time if no computer is
>asside – or if I wish to make a first draft of video-transcription –
>
>So I guess I will retry to write everything with more accuracy – even as if
>writing a calligraphic piece of art –  For my first grade students I even
>developed worksheets that allowed them just to write upon given lines and
>letters in order to practise the keystroke again and again in a guided
>manner ... I think of same materials for SW Handwriting.
>
>2)       In order to understand the Handwriting procedure I had to turn
>several time to your posted lessons – showing lifelike drawings of
>handshapes – SW printing and SW Handwriting aside. Thanks for that – it is 
>a
>great support
>
>3)       Within this context – I bet that a rather stupid repetition of
>every handshape in all 96 variations would be a rather helpful task to
>become familiar with how to write ... I would prefer to have access to a
>table of clearly written handsymbols of the six basic hand shapes we used 
>to
>talk about –
>
>4)       Flat hand with no lines (parallel to the floor seems not that easy
>to read for me – hm – somehow I feel uncomfortable with this solution – how
>about others??
>
>5)       What about arrow – writing. I am looking forward to learn about
>your ideas how to distinguish between right hand/ lefthand – both hands
>arrows (Within this excercise I watched myself to neglect the fill for the
>right hand movement and even wrote the arrowhead – which is used in 
>printing
>for “hands as unit” – for right hand movement – Especially circle movements
>( like in sign are of particular interest to me.)
>
>6)       When I started to create TT-Fonts for publishing I tried to
>understand your idea bind “symbol – construction”  At that time I measured
>every sign and compared the lenghts of the lines and the proportions of
>different symbols. In the end I understood several principles that are
>really interesting regarding lenght and width of the differen symbols. Who
>knows how much time you spend on this question or whether you felt guided 
>by
>DOS – pixel – graphic – possibilities? Anyway while trying to do my 
>homework
>I understood that there are different proportions compared to printing- for
>example often I write the circle for the head too small ... so I guess it
>will take time to develop a kind of feeling for proportions in handwriting?
>
>7)       It turned out that copying printing to Handwriting repeatedly has
>been a neccessary until I felt able to do the Handwriting without 
>additional
>support. I guess that Deaf people – fluent in their SignLanguage – will 
>have
>not as much trouble to imagine a visual representation of all the different
>possibilities of handshape and handorientation. So back to practice of
>writing again and again 96 hand –tables - ;-)
>
>8)       Can you add numbers to the pages or can you teach me how to add
>numbers to a downloaded PDF ?
>
>9)       What do you recommend for scanning? The scanner offers different
>options – 100 dpi enough for our purposes? Are you interested in the
>original page or just in what we wrote on paper. The last option would 
>allow
>us to scan a smaller area – less pixel – minor bites!
>
>10)   Just imaging – sitting in your house – doing this Handwriting it 
>would
>be helpful to get your feedback while you are going around and looking at 
>my
>procedure – smaller or big enough, too slow or quick enough, and to learn
>from others about their ideas, problems and questions. So thank you soooo
>much for your time and attention to do all this email-feedback and your
>website – design – which is a standard of its own - congrats  -
>
>
>
>
>
>I got photos from some participants and as I said before it is fun to put
>faces to the names and lateron sign names. So everybody of this Handwriting
>course is invited who is interested to get his own Handwriting and Printing
>signname as a unique TT – Font to send a photo to me. –
>
>
>
>I am looking forward to study the comments and feedback and to learn more
>about Handwriting next week.
>
>
>
>Have a super  weekend
>
>
>
>Stefan ;-)
>
>
>
>
>


><< homework1January13.png >>



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