Home » Posts tagged with "urdu"

Sponsored
Link

Sponsored
Link

Sponsored
Link

Sponsored
Link

free image urdu nastaliq

| Posted by on August 29, 2010
Although this was a new solution employing over 20,000 ligatures (individually designed character combinations) which provided the most beautiful results, and allowed newspapers such as Pakistan’s Daily Jang to use digital typesetting instead of an army of calligraphers, it suffered from two troubles in the 1990s: (a) its non-availability...
Filed in: Nastaliq

Urdu calligraphy free image

| Posted by on August 28, 2010
Welcome to the Urdu calligraphy, a free image Urdu is one of the two official languages of Pakistan. It is also one of the 22 scheduled languages of India plus is an official language of five Indian states. There are between 60 plus 80 million native speakers of normal Urdu. According to the SIL Ethnologue (1999 information), Urdu/Hindi is the...
Filed in: Nastaliq
Urdu calligraphy is a main shape of art for Islamic chart look and originality. All through the huge topography of the Islamic earth, Urdu calligraphy is a sign on behalf of unity, good looks, and power. The artistic values of Urdu calligraphy are a mirror image of the educational principles of the Muslim world. A thorough study into the artistic...
Filed in: Nastaliq
beauty of the Urdu nastaliq calligraphy in adobe photo shop.
Filed in: Nastaliq

Urdu nastaliq art

| Posted by on August 24, 2010
Nastalīq is amongst the for the most part fluid calligraphy ways for the Arabic alphabet. It has short verticals with no serifs, and long horizontal blows. It is written using a piece of trimmed reed with a tip of 5–10 mm, called “aalam” (“pen,” in Arabic and Persian “قلم”), and carbon ink, named “davat.”...
Filed in: Nastaliq
The Urdu-alphabet is the right-to-left alphabet new for the Urdu verbal communication. It is a modification of the Persian alphabet, which is itself a derivative of the Arabic alphabet. by 38 letters, the Urdu alphabet is typically written in the calligraphic Nasta’liq writing, whereas Arabic is additional commonly in the Naskh style. Usually,...
Filed in: Nastaliq