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Livro manuscrito em sânscrito.

Nepal

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Handmade rice paper, hand written letters, handpainting too.

Book (traditional) writthe in sänscrit language (Language ancient about 3000 years) telling about Buddha's Life and His Teachings).

Bought in Nepal - it came with me :)))

This stationery is a reproduction of the cross-carpet page of St. Mark, The Lindisfarne Gospels, c. 698 A.D. This little pocket dragon is pretending he can actually create beautiful art.

Palm-leaf manuscripts are manuscripts made out of dried palm leaves. Palm leaves were used as writing materials in Indian subcontinent and in Southeast Asia dating back to the 5th century BCE and possibly much earlier.

 

The palm leaves are first cooked and dried. The writer then uses a stylus to inscribe letters. Natural colourings are applied to the surface so the ink will stick in the grooves. This process is similar to intaglio printing.

the entire orginal manuscript for Neal Stephenson's "Baroque Cycle".

 

Excerpt from a note at the end of the "Quicksilver":

 

"The manuscript of the Baroque Cycle was written by hand on 100 percent cotton paper, using three different fountain pens: a Waterman Gentleman, a Rotring, and a Jorg Hysek. It was then transcribed, edited, formatted and printed using eMacs and TeX. When it was totally finished, the TeX version of the manuscript was converted to Quark XPress format using an eMacs LISP program written by the author."

 

I had forgotten that the manuscript was kept here until I came across the display, and my jaw dropped. Neal Stephenson is one of my favorite authors, and this alone was worth almost the entire trip for me, because I am big goddamn nerd.

This elegantly calligraphed and illuminated codex contains a prayer (wird) entitled Miftāḥ al-najāḥ attributed to ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib, the fourth caliph of Islam. The manuscript was executed by Shaykh Kamāl ibn ʿAbd al-Ḥaqq al-Sabzawārī in Astarabad (present-day Gorgan, Iran) in 941 AH / 1534 CE.

 

To explore fully digitized manuscripts with a virtual page-turning application, please visit Walters Ex Libris.

John Rylands Library Manchester UK

chinguetti, a medieval trading center founded in the 13th century is now home for some libraries full of ancient manuscripts. here the library of the Fondation Ahmed al Mahmoud

chinguetti, mauritania

 

africa2007 trip

As a kid reading the titles in the old mans book collection, I never understood why Steinbeck would write about a bit of driftwood.

 

As an adult I understand the title but why photograph such?

 

Fuji X-T1, Samyang 12/2.0, 25 secs at f/11, ISO 400

Macro Mondays theme: Desk

 

Thank you everyone for your visits, faves, and kind comments

rather than chocolate, tulips or gin, i bought some old manuscripts in Amsterdam (most are in french)...the earliest date on them is 1629....Rembrandt would have been 23...

 

that memory stick won't last more than a few months.....

I am still trying to workout what this say. "P" something perhaps =D

Have a great day my friends.

a palimpsest is a manuscript that is scraped clean and used again... and again.

Ancient Pandulipis (Manuscripts) displayed in the Payana Car Museum, Srirangapatna, Karnataka.

 

Max Muller (1823-1900) has written in his book that " India is the only country of learned people and scholars in this entire world , where the vast wealth of knowledge is preserved in the form of handwritten texts".

 

Orality - Manuscripts- Print- Electronic

Duomo Museum. Illuminated Manuscript. Florence, Italy. Photos available for purchase at Wits End Photography. Follow my blog Traveling at Wits End for ways to create travel adventures everyday.

Chinguetti (Mauritania), 2025

Er komt een konijn bij de bakker. Hij vraagt: ‘Bakker, heeft u worteltjestaart?’ De bakker schudt zijn hoofd en het konijn gaat naar huis.

De volgende dag staat het konijn weer voor de toonbank van de bakker.

‘Bakker, heeft u worteltjestaart?’

Weer moet de bakker nee verkopen en met hangende oren gaat het konijn naar huis. Maar nu is het de bakker genoeg. Hij besluit worteltjestaart te bakken! Het is een heel werk, zeker omdat de bakker het voor het eerst doet. Maar het lukt !

En ja, hoor, de volgende dag is daar het konijn weer en vraagt: ‘Bakker, heeft u vandaag wel worteltjestaart?’

Hierop zegt de bakker trots en blij: ‘Jazeker! Ik heb worteltjestaart!’

Waarop het konijn zegt: ‘Vies hè?’

Another of this year's Fourth of July celebration using action on the medium telephoto-zoom. It looks like opening pages of an ancient yellowed but well worn manuscript. I've gotten golden veils like that before with zooms. I do like these hand-held telephoto traces. This EXIF reports 200mm but I probably used more zoom range than shows of the red and gold explosions at different times and during different parts of the visible zoom.

 

I was in the good spot I used last year although I took shelter under a Roger's Grove tree during the heavenly sprinkle. I ran into the same problems with procedures shooting fireworks at night as I did last year. Maybe I'll get it right before long. This year was a chore: I had to buy my fifth for the fourth on the third! What else could go wrong on my long walk to the fourth venue from the Golden Ponds parking.

 

The most prominent problem is tracking the action when triggering the exposure: the display and eyepiece go blank and alternate tracking strategy is needed. I am coming up with an apparatus that could overcome the problem, I had trouble with accurately tracking the action while using the monopod so I ditched the monopod this year. Why would I need steady? I have conferred with several psychiatrists about the many people with explosive personality defects even though psychiatrists have little to do with the study of science. There is a marked difference between psychiatrist's study of explosive personalities and the study of psychotics like the Koch Brothers and con-servatives. It's a cause and effect study. The Broes have taken major revenge upon my region of Kochistan with a couple days at 102 degreess and idiots from Alabama, on the run from the South, starting forest fires near Nederland. They probably didn't like their mountain retreat camp. The scoflaws were found at the refuge center. Go figure! Don't take a dump where you dance!

 

I am adding these "action" shots to my stash, all of the fiery kind. Although I still have a pile to clean up, I dumped even more into storage this year. This one was taken at an opportune time that revealed there were multiple eruptions during the 2 1/2 second exposure. The EXIF reports only the start of zooms. Apparently there was good motion and the usual shakes as the fireworks erupted. I remained impressed with how these can appear stable at all at these slow exposures. The colors: I thought of how to react to the mass of colors.

  

From Cornell’s rare book and manuscript collection

Detail from an old manuscript at the exhibition “From Albrecht Dürer and Thomas à Kempis” at Museum De Fundatie Zwolle, the Netherlands. This book, the Zwolle Bible, is 550 years old.

The Puccini museum in Lucca, Italy contains many of his manuscripts. Photos available for purchase at Wits End Photography. Follow my blog Traveling at Wits End for ways to create travel adventures everyday.

歌 無孤苦古 ⚡❄

 

2021 答 Big Dream 1993

 

♩ ♩ ♫ ♩

 

6 71 2 7♭65

4 56 1 7♭65

Big enough to share

only I can make

 

123 5 654

making it come true

making me feel new

 

5 32

Maybe

  

©《Big Dream》 (The Thing Called Love)

youtu.be/aaaw2K_SL2s

 

#Vegan↓ #WeWillRiseTogether↑

Worcester Cathedral ~

This is a hand-written manuscript produced on some type of fine polished animal skin. I own two of them, which I bought very inexpensively years ago. One has a defect at the edge of the page, and this one has some sort of random mark on oneside. I used to do a lot of calligraphy, some with handmade reed pens, so I could appreciate how these scribes worked. Years ago, pages like this were plentiful and not really seen as any type of art form.

 

Edward Johnston, a calligrapher who was largely responsible for the rebirth of the art during the last century, wrote a lot about the old scribes. He said that "the thing that would have struck us most--even more than the skill, would have been the speed with which he wrote...they didn't seek beauty directly....everything they did was primarily for use and even those gorgeous letters they put in their illuminated manuscripts were primarily for use as book markers. " He went on to point out that despite the utilitarian goal, scribes had a "dream of divine beauty that they were seeking," and thus were able to manifest it in their work.

Cecil Court, London

IMG_1887 Wall in the Old Blind School, Liverpool. To me it looks like musical notation - minims and semi quavers. It's the glue from underneath the old wall surface which has been removed. The texture is remarkable - when i ran my fingers over the marks they "spoke" quite loudly.

Probably from a book of hours. Date unknown, possibly modern.

Found framed at a thrift store.

Free download under CC Attribution (CC BY 4.0). Please credit the artist and rawpixel.com.

 

Remarkable 16th century botanical calligraphic artwork by two masters of the past: Georg Bocskay (1510–1575), court secretary to Ferdinand I, and Joris Hoefnagel (1542–1601). First created by Georg Bocskay to demonstrated the different styles of calligraphy of the era, the book was later ornamented with intricate fruits, flowers, and insects by Joris Hoefnagel and commissioned by Emperor Rudolph II, Ferdinand’s grandson. This unusual artistic collaboration between scribe and painter disrupted the history of manuscript illumination and gave us one of the most fascinating and beautifully crafted manuscripts of all time. Complement your designs, posters, and wallpapers with these enchanting CC0 illustrations from the past. We have digitally enhanced these spellbound hand-drawn calligraphy into high resolution printable quality. They are free to download under the CC0 license.

 

Higher resolutions with no attribution required can be downloaded: https://www.rawpixel.com/board/1286070/model-book-calligraphy

 

Continuing to delve into memories of the season.

 

The leaves around the edges are a direct scan from a flatbed scanner.

In 2012 fundamentalist Islamists took over the city of Timbuktu, Mali. Fearing for the safety of hundreds of thousands of ancient manuscripts, some dating from the 11th Century, a group of librarians and preservationists smuggled between 200,000 and 400,000 manuscripts from Timbuktu to the Malian capital of Bamako.

 

Since that time, the NGO SAVAMA-DCI ("Sauvegarde et Valorization des Manuscripts pour la defense de la Culture Islamique" in French, translated to English as "Association for the Protection and Promotion of Manuscripts and the Defense of Islamic Culture"), has worked to clean, protect, restore, digitize, and eventually translate hundreds of thousands of manuscripts.

 

This photo shows a worker gently cleaning the dust and other contaminants off one of the ancient manuscripts.

 

For more information on the group and their work, see my story at stories.fischerfotos.com/preserving-malis-historic-manusc...

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