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Saturday, November 5, 2011

The Process



Last month I posted one of my calligraphy pieces as an introduction for myself and my "subject" on the blog. This month, I want to draw a couple parallels between calligraphy and our writing. Believe it or not, the finished product doesn't magically appear. Just as we spend hours working on our writing, polishing and refining it, the calligrapher also spends hours--much of it in preparation before he or she leaps out with the touch of faith to put pen to paper. As with almost anything we attempt, we start with practice. Repetition and constant practice leads to competency at the very least.
Once we have a minimum competency, we start attempting a complete project. First a word. Then a sentence. Perhaps a paragraph! And finally a short story. It's rough. The characters are off just a little. We need to polish it up a bit.
When we're ready, we start to work on the final layout. How big should our calligraphy piece be? How many words will be right for our story? For both, the answer is the same. Small enough to finish without getting discouraged. Big enough to challenge us.
But what about the window dressing? The border? Or as it's know in writing, what about the world building? Even in a contemporary story set on everyday Main Street, there are details we must decide. What is the season? Which way does the heroine turn when she goes to work? A rough map will help nail down the details just as the rough border does for our calligraphy piece. It does something else. It frames the piece providing a finishing touch. Oh, the piece is complete with just the words. But the border gives it framework and cohesion.
When the writer spends time on the world building for their story, it adds polish and completion to their story. Does it take time? Oh, yes. It certainly takes time. Is it worth it? Take another look at the finished piece at the top. What do you think?

anny
www.annycook.com

9 comments:

Sandra Cox said...

Whew! Anny, its like painting a picture. Lots and lots of time, skill and patience.

anny cook said...

But worth it--both calligraphy and writing--when it's finished.

Amarinda Jones said...

Commenting to see if I can comment, comment

anny cook said...

Glad you dropped by Amarinda!

Rhobin said...

And so frustrating when you get done and look back and see you forgot a letter in one word.

Rhobin said...

PS. Anny, you should join the yahoo group calligraphy exchange. The main goal is to exchange envelopes with other calligraphers. There is usually one exchange a month, but it is your option to sign up or not. I have received some fabulous envelopes!

anny cook said...

Yeah...I sure hate a mistake!

Jinny B said...

I once did wedding invitation envelopes for a lady and she called me later to say that instead of writing HRC I had written HCR on all 150 envelopes. She mailed them and didn't notice, but Wow! Embarrassing! I wanted to give her money back, but she was a friend and wouldn't take it. Yes its very frustrating to miss a word or spell it wrong!

anny cook said...

I'm such a nit-picker, I suspect doing envelopes would make me crazy! Also, I need "room" to work. I bet a small envelope would be more than I could deal with.

My current project in the planning stages is a 20 X 26 inch piece. :-)