Today's Date
- Today's date is July 29, 2010
18 Av 5770. - Scheduled completion of sefer Torah:
in 154 days
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I’m back to business again and back to my regular writing schedule of 21 to 30 lines per day. Today I finished a good chunk of Parshas Noach. Hopefully I will have it finished before Rosh ha-Shanna and then be well on my way to Lech-Lecha, the next section of the Torah according to the traditional division and cycle of readings.
By this point I have gotten the feel of the klaf (parchment) enough to notice that the writing was coming out exceptionally even and well spaced. Knowing my own writing all too well, and knowing that I didn’t trim the quill between the last section and the current one, I suspected that something must be different with this yeria (sheet of parchment).
I took out my calipers and measured the height and width of the lines, finding their measurements yielded a ratio of almost exactly 17:155 – a “golden ratio” of sorts for figuring the height/width of lines in a Torah or Megilla scroll. For reasons that will be explained in an upcoming post, this ratio tends to generate the most evenly spaced script, fewest numbers of stretched letters, and all with the lease crowded appearance. This ratio of this particular yeria differs from the other yerios by a mere hairs breadth, yet to the hand of a sofer, that minute discrepancy makes an amazing amount of difference.
Check in Wednesday for more videos – This time we tackle the letter gimel!
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