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  2. D'Nealian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D'Nealian

    D'Nealian. The D'Nealian Method (sometimes misspelled Denealian) is a style of writing and teaching handwriting based on Latin script which was developed between 1965 and 1978 by Donald N. Thurber (1927–2020) in Michigan, United States. Building on his experience as a primary school teacher, Thurber aimed to make the transition from print ...

  3. List of typefaces designed by Frederic Goudy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_typefaces_designed...

    The following is a list of typefaces designed by Frederic Goudy.. Goudy was one of America's most prolific designers of metal type. He worked under the influence of the Arts and Crafts movement, and many of his designs are old-style serif designs inspired by the relatively organic structure of typefaces created between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries, following the lead of earlier ...

  4. Myriad (typeface) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myriad_(typeface)

    Myriad is a humanist sans-serif typeface designed by Robert Slimbach and Carol Twombly for Adobe Systems. Myriad was intended as a neutral, general-purpose typeface that could fulfill a range of uses and have a form easily expandable by computer-aided design to a large range of weights and widths. [1] [2]

  5. Serif - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serif

    Serifs originated from the first official Greek writings on stone and in Latin alphabet with inscriptional lettering —words carved into stone in Roman antiquity. The explanation proposed by Father Edward Catich in his 1968 book The Origin of the Serif is now broadly but not universally accepted: the Roman letter outlines were first painted ...

  6. File:D'Nealian Cursive.svg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:D'Nealian_Cursive.svg

    D'Nealian Cursive.svg. English: The English alphabet, both uppercase and lowercase letters, written in D'Nealian cursive script. The grey arrows, beside each letter/numeral, indicate the starting position for drawing each symbol. For letters which are written using more than one stroke, grey numbers indicate the order in which the lines are drawn.

  7. Kurrent - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kurrent

    Kurrent ( German: [kʊˈʁɛnt]) is an old form of German-language handwriting based on late medieval cursive writing, also known as Kurrentschrift ("cursive script"), deutsche Schrift ("German script"), and German cursive. Over the history of its use into the first part of the 20th century, many individual letters acquired variant forms.

  8. Zaner-Bloser (teaching script) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zaner-Bloser_(teaching_script)

    The Zaner-Bloser (also Zaner-Bloser Method) is a teaching script for handwriting based on Latin script as well as a system of penmanship instruction, which originated around 1904 at the Zanerian College of Penmanship in Columbus, Ohio. Charles P. Zaner (1864–1918) and Elmer W. Bloser (1865–1929), originally a Spencerian Method instructor ...

  9. Humanist minuscule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanist_minuscule

    Humanist minuscule is a handwriting or style of script that was invented in secular circles in Italy, at the beginning of the fifteenth century. [1] ". Few periods in Western history have produced writing of such great beauty", observes the art historian Millard Meiss. [2] The new hand was based on Carolingian minuscule, which Renaissance ...