inspirational typography:
http://dzineblog.com/2011/01/139-impressive-typography-design-inspiration.html
all images © 2018 by louis lemoine
inspirational typography:
http://dzineblog.com/2011/01/139-impressive-typography-design-inspiration.html
biting off small pieces of the elephant at a time. great advice from my friend noah.
“the best way to predict the future is to create it” –
peter f. drucker
From the Charles Bukowski “Poet on the Edge” exhibit (Oct. 9, 2010 – Feb. 14, 2011)
At The Huntington Library:
“The poem tightens the novel. The novel loosens the poem.”
“My idea of life is the next page. The next paragraph. The next sentence.”
“What matters most is how well you walk through fire.”
being a lover of letters it saddens me to see that there is hardly anyone writing letters by hand anymore. the advent of the computer literally ended the handwritten letter. each day there are millions if not billions of emails going from point a to point b in cyberspace. in friedrich neugebauer’s book, “the mystic art of written forms he states that the ancient chinese said: there are only three arts: poetry, calligraphy and drawing. these are the arts which, through heart, brain and hand, and with a minimum of materials, achieve the highest level of intensity and clarity. to receive a handwritten letter is special because for one thing it shows that the person who wrote it took the time to put his/her self into it. in typing, many things can be unconsciously hidden but in the hand written letter everything becomes exposed and legible, leaving nothing to chance for falsehood or disguise to go unnoticed. the personal nuances of a person’s lettering is the subtlest detector of one’s substance and character; it is the writers confession depicting his/her impulses and emotions, all things that move him/her at that moment in time for communicating. lettering is subject to the rhythm that comes from the beating heart, the pulse, the movement of blood. it can be described as a very special electrocardiogram, translating the mental state at the time in the visible. each movement of the hand to the paper is a spiritual act as it finds the appropriate symbol that eventually finds itself now embedded in the paper. it can be summed up as a grand procession of all human conditions, bound together by the rhythm of a single act. i want to share with you something that i experienced a few years back while taking a workshop at one of the yearly international lettering conferences that was held in connecticut, usa that particular year. i had the opportunity to take a workshop from a german calligrapher by the name of gottfried pott. in one of his class demonstrations we all gathered around him to watch how he was going to produce a letter using a ruling pen. it was so quiet that you could hear a pin drop. very methodically and gently, he loaded the ink into the ruling pen with a brush in the opposite hand. he looked at the paper as if becoming one with it, pen very still. then with a few quick movements of his hand across the paper, like a magician with his wand, there it was…a perfect letter “a”. gottfried then looked up at us from the top of his narrow bifocal glasses and said something that i will never forget. he said, “you have just witnessed a once in a lifetime moment”. it truly was a once in a lifetime moment because that letter “a” could never be duplicated exactly like the way he did it, ever again. the feel of the pen to paper at that moment in time. it was one of those moments where the hair on your arms just stood on end. at least for our class it was. it was very spiritual, at least to those of us that understood the deeper meaning behind it all. i think that is why i enjoy teaching calligraphy so much, because you are teaching people who first of all love letters and secondly who want to take part in this human experience. so in closing, the next time that you write an email to a relative, friend or acquaintance maybe you might give it second thought and send them a handwritten letter, something that they can look at and cherish and know that it was crafted special for them in that once in a lifetime moment.
just read an article where it talked about how doodling, which is often noted as a sign of a wandering mind, may actually help us to absorb information. in a study published in applied cognitive psychology,jackie andrade at britain’s university of plymouth played a rambling voice-mail message to 40 people, half of whom were given shapes to fill in as they listened. the result was astonishing. the doodlers recalled 29% more of the message than those who just listened. andrade says that idle scribbling uses just enough cognitive bandwidth to prevent daydreaming, so it may help us to stay focused.
Nothing is more memorable than a smell. One scent can be unexpected, momentary and fleeting, yet conjure up a childhood summer beside a lake in the mountains; another, a moonlit beach; a third, a family dinner of pot roast and sweet potatoes during a myrtle-mad August in a Midwestern town. Smells detonate softly in our memory like poignant land mines hidden under the weedy mass of years. Hit a tripwire of smell and memories explode all at once. A complex vision leaps out of the undergrowth. ~Diane Ackerman, A Natural History of the Senses
recently joined a ‘smart’ car group called so cal smarties and will attend my first meet on february 5th. looking forward to it.

i am born in the year of the dragon and came across this cool dragon graphic. wish i new created it.