
Click each thumbnail for a larger image. All pictures open in a new window.
Decoration doesn't have to be fancy or over-the-top, as you can see on the Decorating
Your Work page, plain and simple can sometimes be more effective. Too much can detract
from the lettering itself.
In the first of these 3 pieces, a passage from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam (which
a friend of mine once referred to as the 'Rubber Mat of Alakazam'), I decided to
keep the decoration simple in favour of emphasising the letters. In the center piece,
I wanted to portray the texture of writing itself and its similarity to weaving a
pattern. The 3rd uses an elaborate piece of decoration as the focal point but also
portrays the context of the writing.
The first piece is part of a series of 4 I drew some years ago. The inner border
could be used by itself. It was relatively simple to draw and took very little time
compared to the outer border. The centre piece I wrote for a friends daughters christening.
It has suffered over time. As you will have gathered, my main influence is Celtic
Art. This is a time-consuming and complicated form of art, based on grids and circles,
etc, but I would recommend anybody to have a go - it is very therapeutic. Once you've
got the idea of what it's about you can draw some of the designs freehand.
The two Ex Libris designs were lettered by drawing the outline of the letters and
filling them in. Feel free to print them out and use them. Resized and layed out
in a desktop publishing program, they can be printed on stickers ready for use. The
center piece was lettered in the same way as the example ("The Foundations Of Good
Health...") on the Decorative Letters page.
Decoration doesn't have to be fancy or over-the-top, as you can see on the Decorating
Your Work page, plain and simple can sometimes be more effective. Too much can detract
from the lettering itself.








