Showing posts with label blog review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog review. Show all posts

Saturday, September 4, 2010

farr out!

meet Jane Farr – Amercian calligrapher and blogger from 'A Place to Flourish'



Jane commenced blogging at 'A Place to Flourish' almost exactly the same time we set up calligraffia (early 2009), and I've got to say I've been enjoying her posts (mostly from afar) ever since! I think what I like best about Jane's blog is her extensive and exciting links to calligraphers blogs (go to her blog and you'll see what I mean!) and her generosity and humility as a calligrapher and blogger - something I think you'll notice is evident throughout her posting.

Sooooo I asked Jane to share a bit about her blogging experiences and some advice for blogging beginners (and blogging old hands).....

here's Jane:

I think the most interesting and rewarding experience that blogging has provided me is the people I have met and the friendships I have formed. I am continually surprised and encouraged by the emails I receive from people that have stumbled upon my blog. The blogosphere has made calligraphy a much less solitary occupation for me. I have even been fortunate to meet some of my blogs followers. These are people with which I have much in common but probably would never have met if it weren’t for A Place to Flourish. Many of my readers don’t have access to a local, calligraphy guild or to calligraphy classes, workshops, etc., so I try to include posts about what I’m learning. Another interesting thing: If I forget to mention in my post what nib I used, I generally get one or two emails asking “What nib did you use?!”




Before launching my blog, I read the book “Clear Blogging” by Bob Walsh He shares a wealth of information, but I found his following tips to be especially helpful and true:

* Own your words. Be yourself, be genuine, be human.
* Cite your sources and always provide the link.
* Stick to a schedule. Whether you post once per month or once per day, stick to it. Let readers know if you’ll be absent from posting.
* Focus. Can you explain in ten words or less what your blog is about? You should.
* Write for your readers. Spell and grammar check. Short posts are good.
* Use photos to make your posts more interesting.
* Be active. Post comments on other blogs and link to other blogs.
* Share what you are learning.


Although there are still so many things I want to do and try, blogging has definitely helped me grow and flourish as a calligrapher.




Drop by 'A Place to Flourish' or Jane's alternate blog 'Wedding Calligraphy by Jane Farr' for more calligraphic and blogging gems.




**pics reproduced with permission of Jane Farr - please read our copyright policy

Thursday, July 15, 2010

blogging right along.....

Welcome to blog review number two!

We had lovely feedback from our extended interview with Alice Young  from  Contemporary Calligraphy - thanks to everyone who commented/ emailed/ dropped a note in cyberscribes.... it was much appreciated

Now on with the show - we mentioned in our initial call-out for blogs to profile* here on calligraffia, that if you send it in (and it is indeed a blog primarily featuring calligraphy) WE WILL SHOW IT! 

So in future posts you'll see a wonderful variety of large and small calligraphy blogs - in mostly short and sweet posts - today we're going to share a site that some of you may have seen - but it's one that we thoroughly endorse - it's..... (drum roll please)


and here is the blog author Mike Warner to describe what it's all about......


"Long ago (just before the start of the Iraq war) and far away (in California), Thomas Ingmire pulled together an art installation called “Words for Peace.” It has had several replications over the years as a strong anti-war statement in art and calligraphy on a simple 5”x20” piece of paper. Actually – hundreds of them. Well, Thomas gave myself and the Genesee Valley Calligraphy Guild (Rochester, NY) permission to mount a like installation. Hence our blog …

http://wordsforpeace2010.blogspot.com/




The Blog has been like a friend I could talk to and share my excitement with about the project. I think it was a while before I realized that folks were actually reading it. It’s a place to explain why I’m doing this. Who I am. I was accused of being a 20 something anti-war radical. Nah. I’m an old and grizzled Vietnam era veteran with a heart for Peace and a distaste for conflict with no reason. It’s the end of March (2010) and I’ll start posting the photos of the broadsides that are flowing in from all over the world. Visit our Blog. Contribute to the installation. Details are in the second part of the November 10th posting. BTW There is no deadline – we’ll accept whatever is sent in –whenever – and add it on.


Mike Warner"



Now the last post on the site is dated April 2010 - so I'm unsure of future plans (or whether indeed the project has run its course) - but one of the persistent features of blogs and blogging is that even when events have been and gone - there is a virtual residue of their passing in the form of a blog post remainder/reminder......








* there is no deadline for sending in blogs to profile on calligraffia - please feel free to send us your suggestions at any time - all we ask is that it is a BLOG (not website), is in English, and primarily features calligraphy.