February 21, 2010
February 14, 2010
Question and Answers Session
Kyle's Recommended Links
When we were in our mid teens, we befriended several high school and college girls of diverse backgrounds – some from Christian families, most not. As we got to know them better, it became more than just our friendship they sought: they couldn’t stay away from our home.
At our home, they were able to be part of something they did not have. Some of them had never even seen it before. We had an intact, happy family. We had an involved, loving father who protected and provided for us. We had a mother who was an example of godliness and femininity. We had a family that worked together toward an important goal that involved us. While our friends struggled to know where they were going, who they were supposed to be, and where they fit into an egalitarian, dog-eat-dog society, we were discovering a world of stimulation, fruitfulness and purpose within God’s family economy. These girls felt the difference.
Labels: book, Kyle's Links, orthopraxy
February 10, 2010
The Story of Trajan
One especially enthralling aspect of the book was the history and description of "Trajan." Trajan, while it may be overused (or over-overused) in the film graphic design industry, is still one of the great fonts of history.
No finer Roman capital letters are to be seen anywhere than those inscribed on a stone tablet on the pedestal of the great column erected by the Emperor Trajan in Rome about the year 113 of the Christian era. The simple harmony of the lines and curves and the grace and good taste of the fine proportions have caused them to serve as models for more than eighteen hundred years. While the letters J, U, and W were not members of the Roman alphabet, they are drawn in the style of the Trajan alphabet and included with it here [in the succeeding pages of the book] to make it complete.
It is indeed thrilling to look at these capitals, for they have the very breath of free artistry in them. Many designers have tried to determine a way to a better set of proportions. Many changes in the shape have been tried. Many mechanical methods of writing and drawing have been invented. But no one has yet succeeded in making a Roman capital alphabet which is more beautiful, more easily written, more honestly arrived at than these fine old letters.[1]
Aside from a small amount of evolutionary teaching (primarily in the first two chapters or so) and an unnecessary immodest historical drawing or two, the book is highly recommended.
[1] Ogg, Oscar. The 26 Letters (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1948), p.119.
Labels: design books
February 07, 2010
How to Defend the Faith by Loving Your Wife
These lectures have been a blessing to me, and to be honest with you, I am rather sad that they are coming to a close.
The first message, "How to Defend the Faith by Loving Your Wife," was delivered Saturday, 2 January 2010, and has been made available to the public for free download.
