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Help with transcribing names -
02-27-2011, 11:10 AM
Hi,
I am trying to make a birthday gift card for a Japan-loving friend of mine, and need help with Japanese writing. I am trying to write the following 5 names in Japanese, vertically (I put hyphens between the syllables to make the pronunciation clearer): Ke-ren Shpil-sher Mo-rag ('rag' pronounced like 'rug' in english) Tze-pe-le-witz ('witz' pronounced like 'vitch') Coo-per Thanks! Mike. |
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02-27-2011, 11:56 AM
Quote:
Ke-ren カレン Shpil-sher シュピルシャー Mo-rag モーラッグ Tze-pe-le-witz ツェペルヴィッチ Coo-per クーパー With Keren, write it like: カ レ ン You don't rotate the letters in any way; Just rearrange them vertically. The horizintal bars that you see will be written vertically in vertical writing. ー becomes I like the upper-case "I" without the little horizontal strokes at top and bottom. The difficult part would be the smal letters that you see in the three names in the middle. I will post this now to see how the Japanese letters appear in large fonts and try to explain what I have to from there. |
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02-27-2011, 12:20 PM
OK, you see the small letters ュ,ャ,ッ,ェ and ィ used in the three names in the middle? When writing them vertically, you need to change their positioning. In horizontal, they are placed at the bottom just as the normal letters (except the horizontal bar). In horizontal, the base line is at the bottom of the letters just as in European languages.
In vertical writing, the base line is at the right-hand side of the letters. Let me show you using Shpil-sher. シ ュ ピ ル シ ャ | Simply move the two small letters a little to the right so that all the letters are lined up on the imaginary vertical line at the right. |
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02-27-2011, 12:30 PM
Absolutely brilliant!
Thank you very much for your help. One final question, though. She is an artist, and I want the lettering to appear calligarphic. Since I am printing this in a graphics software, is there a specific font you recommend using? Mike. |
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02-27-2011, 01:01 PM
Quote:
All the letters used to write those names above are called Katakana and they are very simple with much fewer strokes compared to Kanji, the Chinese characters. So, you can choose from more fonts than when writing using all the three writing systems of Japanese (Hiragana, Katakana and Kanji). Sorry I'm not being of much help in this regard. Hope some other members can chip in with recommendations. |
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02-27-2011, 03:11 PM
I don't think you would be well-advised to make katakana more calligraphic. The structure of the characters don't really lend themselves well to it.
But if you just want to make it "artsy," Lovely Capsule does look nice: Lovely Capsules Font | dafont.com You might check these out if you want something that is a bit more handwritey: 12 Japanese Handwriting Style Fonts. Free download! | Jayhan Loves Design & Japan |
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