Looking for the perfect quote
2005-08-25 11:56 amI have to do up a little stage-by-stage thing of how we do illumination/scrolls in the SCA for our upcoming demo. I thought to do it like six series of initials starting a short text all on one page. The problem I am having is - what text would suit being broken up in six parts with an initial starting each piece. And the snippets can't be too long either.
It would be awesome if it could be some sort of medieval text, song lyrics maybe? a poem? If not that then maybe short texts describing either a) the SCA b) my shire c) the process of illumination d) what scrolls are.
Then I might do more stuff around these initials and snippets of text, but that's above and beyond what I'd planned originally.
Anyway, I post here because someone who reads might have a really good suggestion for a text that would suit. I'm not sure about language, if I should do it in Swedish or if English is ok... I even started looking to my own poetry, but I'll leave that as a very last resort I think :P
ETA: It came to me as self-evident: The Canterbury Tales!
I searched and promptly found this excellent site with middle and modern English side by side. I also found the British Library's two Caxton editions online for perusal. I could write it in middle English with the proper script, but I don't know the proper script, nor can most people read it, so I'll go for the modern translation, taking the introductions to the knight, squire, monk, prioress, miller and merchant.
It would be awesome if it could be some sort of medieval text, song lyrics maybe? a poem? If not that then maybe short texts describing either a) the SCA b) my shire c) the process of illumination d) what scrolls are.
Then I might do more stuff around these initials and snippets of text, but that's above and beyond what I'd planned originally.
Anyway, I post here because someone who reads might have a really good suggestion for a text that would suit. I'm not sure about language, if I should do it in Swedish or if English is ok... I even started looking to my own poetry, but I'll leave that as a very last resort I think :P
ETA: It came to me as self-evident: The Canterbury Tales!
I searched and promptly found this excellent site with middle and modern English side by side. I also found the British Library's two Caxton editions online for perusal. I could write it in middle English with the proper script, but I don't know the proper script, nor can most people read it, so I'll go for the modern translation, taking the introductions to the knight, squire, monk, prioress, miller and merchant.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 10:53 am (UTC)it has excellent nice step by step i llustrations on how to use tempera techniques in medieval bookpainting! but it might not be what you are looking for though...
but one could actually use the text too and end up having made an pretty and illustrated guide to medieval illumination techniques. hm, i like that idea. maybe i should actually do a göttingen modelbuch of my own?!
/m
no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 11:08 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 11:25 am (UTC)oh and please give me a call if you ever start out that scriptorium again, i would definately be tempted to go to uppsala every now and again. i miss so much not having any oportunity to discuss/make calligraphy and medieval tempera techniques... :)
/m
ps
Date: 2005-08-25 11:30 am (UTC)page 5, illustrating the dark blue and red leaf, is actually a one-pager :)
/m
We be soldiers three
Date: 2005-08-25 11:58 am (UTC)You get three verses, and can write different lines of the chorus...
Re: We be soldiers three
Date: 2005-08-25 12:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-08-25 09:46 pm (UTC)THe other thing you might like is Pangur Ban (http://www.geocities.com/Yosemite/Trails/2237/lit/PangurBan.html) (there are other translations).