Syllabus & Project

Period 1,2,3 –

  1. Sign in to Classroom at classroom.google.com.
  2. On the homepage, click Add Add and then Join class.
  3. Enter this code:
    Period 1: ovfy1bu
    Period 2: y6o1mt
    Period 3: vxbpl2x
    and click Join

 

Digital Arts Syllabus

Digital_Arts_Project_1

Class practice:

water

 

Project 1 Examples:

caruso_alphabet_project Jeong_AlphabetProject Velasquez_Steve_AlphabetProject Trejo_Alphabet Project 01
CLASS NOTES

History of the Alphabet

World Alphabets – quick sample

Vedas – India

‘Dresden Codex’– Maya

Heiroglyphics – Cartouche Examples – Egypt

Trajan Column– Italy

*Other examples of world alphabets/letterforms/logographics – Egyptian, Mayan, Sanskrit, Arabic, Thai, Russian, Chinese, Korean, Armenian

The Alphabet that we us in contemporary English has its roots in many cultures.
In particular, some heavy influences are Phoenician (~1200 B.C.), Greek (~800 B.C.) and Roman (~700 B.C.)  letters.

 

The letters we use today are closest to the Roman Alphabet. The style in which this alphabet is written has changed over time. Examples- early Roman styles (~400-500) , Carolingian miniscule (~800-1200), Black Letter (~1150- 1700s)

Originally letters were written by hand, stamped or carved (and they still are today!). Developments in printing technology led to the development of more standardized type using wooden and metallic blocks. The Gutenberg Bible is considered one of the first mass produced books using carved wooden blocks that would be inked and set on to the paper.