tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12600498.post6471491997416730313..comments2024-01-21T02:58:08.208-05:00Comments on On the Main Line: Manuscript of the Vilna GaonMississippi Fred MacDowellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/02734864605700159687noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12600498.post-53077427758698799612014-01-10T05:05:18.869-05:002014-01-10T05:05:18.869-05:00They portray him as being beyond human so often th...They portray him as being beyond human so often that it's mind altering to see him writing on a paper like any other person.MyTurnAtBatnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-12600498.post-68151865375885959122012-10-15T11:43:07.771-04:002012-10-15T11:43:07.771-04:00Two observations:
1- It's legible! Or at leas...Two observations:<br /><br />1- It's legible! Or at least, would have been easily read before the ink faded.<br /><br />2- I find it interesting that the Gra generally held his pen nib horizontally, so that vertical lines are more often wider than the horizontal ones. In Kesav Bet Yosef (and Ari), and for that matter in most classical square fonts, it's the horizontal lines that are wide and the verticals that are narrow. (In the Sepharadi Kesav Velish, the pen is held at a slight angle, exaggerated in modern fonts like the ubuiquitous Yehudah.)<br /><br />Anyway... Was the Gra a lefty?micha bergerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11612144735431285113noreply@blogger.com