Thank you for the tip. I will take a look. In the meantime I started playing with adapting letters from a graphed alphabet. I thought of using d and p - but thought they'd be a bit fat, so I started iwth the upper half of the letter 'e'. So far I've only seen it on paper. I'll wind a warp and see how it looks in real life when I return from a business trip. It's a bit 'stilted' - but maybe it'll work. Maybe others will try some variations (:D). Peace. D Taylor, DVM
--- In [email protected], Emilysue Reichardt <emily...@...> wrote: > > Medieval notes were definitely square, and in the renaissance (and post > Gutenberg) they added > diamond shape notes. They changed to round somewhere after Elizabethan, > definitely by Bach. > Haven't tried weaving music yet, interesting idea. If you are aiming > for a certain time period I > could point you to some samples. For a 15c example, also called white > notation, see http://www.undoulxregard.org/copenhague/copenhague.html > Try the Llibre Vermell for 14c notation: > http://www.lluisvives.com/servlet/SirveObras/jlv/08140629733581728654480/ > And for 16c, try Ravenscroft http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/ravenscroft/ > > Hope that gives you some fun ideas! > > Amelie > (a musician who sometimes weaves) > > dtdvm wrote: > > > > > > Hi All > > Does anyone know of a source for charted musical notes? I am going to > > >
