All Beginning Calligraphers Desire Expert Formal Guidance and Help. Most people already know about pangrams, such as “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.” These are useful for practicing calligraphic styles — but what about the capital letters? Pangrams often don’t work well for those, because many styles look unattractive or odd, when written in all capitals.
About a century ago, an American calligrapher named James D. Todd (from Salt Lake City, Utah) came up with a wonderful solution for this problem: the alphabetogram.
In an alphabetogram, capitalized words, beginning with each of the 26 letters in alphabetical order, are used to create a brief statement, often aiming for some degree of literary merit. Helper words (few or many) can be used between the main words, for smoothing out the syntax. The letter ‘X’ often stands for ‘Ex-’ — and several other liberties may be taken.
Alphabetograms come in many styles: minimalist (few helper words), backwards (z to a), double (through the alphabet, twice), random (start the sequence with any letter), and lots of others.
Here’s one of James Todd’s most beautiful alphabetograms, called Astronomy:
Zodiac in Yonder Xpanse reveals Worlds that Vibrate Under The Starry Realms Quite like the Pleiades or Orions Nebula. Much Light Keeps Jupiter In the Heaven’s Gleam. From Every Day Comes Brightness Always.
Todd published his alphabetograms in magazines dedicated to penmanship and calligraphy (The American Penman, etc.), written out in many different styles.
Here are the first few words of several more of Todd’s alphabetograms:
- War — Armies Blow up Cities and Devastate the Earth in Fighting…
- Arbitration — Arbitration Besets Challenge, Demands Explanation, Frustrates Greed…
- A Merry Christmas — A Bright Christmas Delightful and Enjoyable…
- Instruction — Advise Before Commanding. Don’t Entertain Freely…
- Advancement — Advance By Climbing. Don’t Ever Forget Gumption…
- F. B. Courtney — All-round Brilliant Courtney Dashes off Elegant Flourishes…
- E. W. Bloser — Alas! Bloser of Columbus is Dead. Everyone’s Friend has Gone Home…
Try to write your own alphabetograms.