- samma typsnitt på alla ord (? / !)
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Att kombinera flera typsnitt ... från ModerSkeppet via LinkedIn
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“Linjer i Rummet”
📙 🔗 Diva-Portal.com
Samt 1 FÖREläsning från JU.se
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Ordens Placering (i förhållande till varandra):
Green Great Dragon can’t exist - Våra språkkunskaper vi är omedvetna om:
“John Ronald Reuel Tolkien wrote his first story aged seven. It was about a “green great dragon.” He showed it to his mother who told him that you absolutely couldn’t have a green great dragon, and that it had to be a great green one instead. Tolkien was so disheartened that he never wrote another story for years.
The reason for Tolkien’s mistake, since you ask, is that adjectives in English absolutely have to be in this order: opinion-size-age-shape-colour-origin-material-purpose Noun. So you can have a lovely little old rectangular green French silver whittling knife. But if you mess with that word order in the slightest you’ll sound like a maniac. It’s an odd thing that every English speaker uses that list, but almost none of us could write it out. And as size comes before colour, green great dragons can’t exist.”
BBC Trending Blog ~ Why the green great dragon can't exist ~
- Ortnamn i Jämtland
the Art of Bookshelf
- Creative Writing ~ 2021-2022 Word Lab Archive PDF
- The Daily Typographic ~ newsletter & Byond
- OCEAN ANCIENT AND EVOLVING ~ sudo-ku af Kat Lehmann
- Write a Dylan Thomas ‘Return Journey’ – Choose Your Own Adventure story with 10 prompts
- Think Like An Artist - Draw a card to begin
- WorldBuilders.ai
Christopher Nolan doesn’t write detailed outlines.Instead, he “draws shapes and diagrams and other structural things” to keep the story on track.Like this, the plot map Nolan used for Inception.Let me explain...In storytelling, the idea of structure is everywhere:• 3 Act• StoryGrid• Hero’s JourneyBut Nolan claims those restrict his creativity.He prefers to think in ‘shapes’ rather than in hard rules.It reminds me of Kurt Vonnegut, who taught about the “shapes of stories” at Harvard.Kurt broke down all stories into 8 unique shapes.The engineer in me loves this view of stories. Instead of vague, hard-to-explain ideas, narrative arcs become data points you can plot.Nolan’s plot map resembles Vonnegut’s “Man In Hole” story shape.The main character gets into trouble then gets out of it again and ends up better off for the experience.But Nolan’s a genius — so he layers on even more.***As Cobb moves closer to Limbo, he travels “down” the plot map, closer and closer to disaster.Then he fights his way back “up” to reality.Nolan’s plot map isn’t just the shape of his story,It’s also how he designed the world — dreams within dreams.***Inception is one of the most complex mainstream movies ever, runs 2.5 hours, and made ~$835M at the box office.Yet Christopher Nolan fits the entire arc on a one page map.That’s brilliant.So, next time you tell a story, give the "shape" idea a try. It may come more naturally than you expect.
~
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