Tengwar Typewriter
Tengwar Typewriter
No word on whether the kerning is supposed to be different in High Elvish and Low Elvish.
Originally shared by Andres Soolo
For when you need to edit your Elvish articles so much that a Tengwar typewriter just won't do.
As from version 3.2, OpenOffice.org (OOo) has native support for Graphite fonts on the Windows and Linux platforms. In other words, Tengwar Telcontar will now be usable out of the box, without the need for any arcane software or plug-ins.
There are even options for fine-tuning the placement of niqud, which can get a bit tricky because like Ulfila's Gothic and unlike Coptic, a few Tengwar have ascenders raising significantly beyond the ordinary boundaries of a line of text:
When silme or esse carries a tehta, it can be placed either to the right or to the left of the ascender. This feature lets you select what behaviour you prefer. I have not examined Tolkien’s usage carefully, but on a cursory inspection it seems that his placement is influenced by the reading order: if the tehta is read before the tengwa, it sits to the left, and vice versa.
http://freetengwar.sourceforge.net/html-files/tengtelc-openoffice-008.pdf
No word on whether the kerning is supposed to be different in High Elvish and Low Elvish.
Originally shared by Andres Soolo
For when you need to edit your Elvish articles so much that a Tengwar typewriter just won't do.
As from version 3.2, OpenOffice.org (OOo) has native support for Graphite fonts on the Windows and Linux platforms. In other words, Tengwar Telcontar will now be usable out of the box, without the need for any arcane software or plug-ins.
There are even options for fine-tuning the placement of niqud, which can get a bit tricky because like Ulfila's Gothic and unlike Coptic, a few Tengwar have ascenders raising significantly beyond the ordinary boundaries of a line of text:
When silme or esse carries a tehta, it can be placed either to the right or to the left of the ascender. This feature lets you select what behaviour you prefer. I have not examined Tolkien’s usage carefully, but on a cursory inspection it seems that his placement is influenced by the reading order: if the tehta is read before the tengwa, it sits to the left, and vice versa.
http://freetengwar.sourceforge.net/html-files/tengtelc-openoffice-008.pdf
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