. How to make show cards; a practical treatise for the use of retail merchants and their clerks. the pen orthe brush, as may be preferred, their outlines beingdrawn as carefully and skilfully as ones ability maypermit. They are then to be filled in with the flat brushand any imperfections corrected. These have notbeen drawn with the intention of producing abso-lutely perfect letters, but to show the usual pro-cedure and result, in first cutting in lettersintended to be filled. Mechanical methods may be employed to pro-duce them, but try and dispense with all aids exceptbrains, hand and brush a
. How to make show cards; a practical treatise for the use of retail merchants and their clerks. the pen orthe brush, as may be preferred, their outlines beingdrawn as carefully and skilfully as ones ability maypermit. They are then to be filled in with the flat brushand any imperfections corrected. These have notbeen drawn with the intention of producing abso-lutely perfect letters, but to show the usual pro-cedure and result, in first cutting in lettersintended to be filled. Mechanical methods may be employed to pro-duce them, but try and dispense with all aids exceptbrains, hand and brush as fast as possible. Group Two. These are letters composed wholly of obliquelines. Letters may be made wide or narrow, tall orshort, or both combined, and these variations some-times alter the rules of construction slightly in orderto produce symmetry or to secure legibility. For letters of normal dimensions it may beremembered that M and W are about half as wideagain as N or H. In drawing V be careful not tovary the slant of the uprights ; they should be the 60 HOW TO MAKE SHOW CAKDS. -7^». W1 ( . KOUP 4.
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjec, booksubjectlettering