bismillah-ar. Unicode Character “﷽” (U+FDFD) (at Reading, England) https://www.instagram.com/p/COq9BoBhQpp/?igshid=16737c2v1n77z
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bismillah-ar. Unicode Character “﷽” (U+FDFD) (at Reading, England) https://www.instagram.com/p/COq9BoBhQpp/?igshid=16737c2v1n77z
at Reading, England https://www.instagram.com/p/COMQ-IYhCRe/?igshid=1deocxsh13jmg
🎡🎢🎠 (at Reading, England) https://www.instagram.com/p/COJc3BbhUmz/?igshid=1ht1u82b11s5i
Itchy heh_ar.init (at Reading, England) https://www.instagram.com/p/CNazDVohmKo/?igshid=dcm4de16mgsu
TypeTogether is pleased to announce the Gerard Unger Scholarship, an initiative to help promising typeface design students develop their careers.
💐#richogr (at University of Reading) https://www.instagram.com/p/CMiodsphyZ3/?igshid=lhzm4gpsq8g6
at University of Reading https://www.instagram.com/p/CMfodA0hD7S/?igshid=z4dvdsaiubrn
Questions
When I was watching this video I cannot help to questioning about why the typesetting in their system can become one of their typography culture also make people feel interest in to that topic and research on it?
How to build that culture in the society?
#richogr2 (at Reading, England) https://www.instagram.com/p/CMIbNBGBp-F/?igshid=jtzgy06ycf2w
Newa Scripts: From Manuscript to Digital | Sunita Dangol and Ananda Maha...
Testing typeface kit
Discover a 17th century Chinese Qur'an on the British Library website
This 17th-century Chinese Qur’an shows how Islamic styles of calligraphy and illumination were combined with local styles, symbols and aesthetics that came from a very different culture.
How is this Qur’an distinctively Chinese?
Examples of the adaptation of Chinese symbols include the lantern motif on the final pages of this Qur’an. The structure of the lantern is outlined in gold and set within a rectangle drawn with a double red line. The impression of a Chinese lantern is further reinforced by hanging tassels attached to the hooks on the outer side of the structures. The script used here is a variation of muhaqqaq. It is penned in a way that suggests the brush strokes associated with Chinese calligraphy, and is often referred to as sini (Chinese) Arabic.
How did Islam come to China?
Islam has a long history in China: in 650 a companion of the Prophet Muhammad was sent as an envoy to the emperor, who then ordered the construction of the first Chinese mosque. Census returns do not include information on religion, so putting a figure on the number of Muslims in the country today is a matter of informed guesswork. Many live in the areas bordering Central Asia, Tibet and Mongolia, and do not speak Chinese as their native language. The Chinese-speaking Muslims belong to a people known as the Hui, who number about 10 million. The vast majority of Hui practise Sunni Islam, and are divided into a number of traditionalist, Sufi and reformist factions.
A seventeenth-century Qur’an from China in the British Library recently attracted much interest in a belated Eid show-and-tell arranged for the local community. This provides an ideal opportunity to go into more detail about the British Library’s collection of Chinese Qur’ans. The opening leaves of a seventeenth-century Qur'an written in...
May be make them have the same angle?
I sini style MS they usually cross but in sini Woodblock they are in same angle also in the Arabic MS they have similar angle and seldom cross.