This directory contains the following files: Metafont files for the Tengwar font. The normal design size is of course 10 points, although for ornamental purposes the best size seems to be about 14 points. Thus, \mode:=localmode; mag:=magstep2; input tengwar is the best command line to use. tengwar.mf The main file. tiw.mf "input" file to include all the other pieces. telcor.mf Stem definitions for the table letters. luvar.mf Bow definitions for the table letters. bars.mf Horizontal bars that are part of table letters. tincotema.mf These four files are the four columns of the parmatema.mf regular table letters (1--24). calmatema.mf quessetema.mf additionals.mf Characters 25--36 from the bottom of the table. fullvowels.mf The unique vowel characters from the Mode of Beleriand. accents.mf Diacritical vowels, dots below, bars, etc. carriers.mf Things to put accents on. punctuation.mf Punctuation marks. numerals.mf JRRT's numerals as reported by Christopher Tolkien (British Tolkien Society 1981). ligtable.mf Some convenient ligatures. Two samples using plain TeX accenting macros to generate pretty stuff: quenya.tex Namarie sindarin.tex A Elbereth Gilthoniel Miscellaneous other stuff: READ-ME This file. Copyright My legal mark, in the spirit of TeX and GNU. Note that this font is *not* public domain; I retain the copyright. However, distribution is free as long as you keep it free. ---------------------------------------------------------------- The letter values are, necessarily, somewhat idiosyncratic. By and large, they are optimized for an English (Westron) mode using the "full" vowels from the Mode of Beleriand. Obviously, using diacritical vowels will require an input file that looks like line noise (see quenya.tex), or will require sufficiently ingenious TeX macros and "active" characters to perform the accenting where needed. This is left as an exercise for the reader. In any case, it is recommended that you print a table out using "testfont.tex" so you can see what's where. The punctuation marks are based on those found in "Namarie". I'm not thrilled over the look of the question mark, but did not have an assortment of examples for this character as I did for the others. The numerals purport to be genuine creations of J.R.R. Tolkien, unearthed by Christopher Tolkien in 1981. I worked from a photocopy of an article attributed to the British Tolkien Society and copyright by Christopher Tolkien (which copyright appears to have been violated by whoever made the photocopy). I presume that duplicating these numerals in digital form is governed by the same laws as duplicating the other letters from Lord of the Rings (which is also copyright). I hope this is all legal. To the best of my knowledge, this is the first digitized Tengwar font that incorporates these numerals. I don't especially care for the look of these numerals, but once again, there was only the single page of specimens to work with, and this page did not show numerals mixed with letters in the same calligraphic style. If the numerals do not look sufficiently different from letters, the practice of the Eldar was to accent each numeral with a dot above; for a long string of numerals, a continuous bar above the string could be used (experiment with \vrule or \hrule for this). Finally, numerals were written in a decimal base, but with the low-order digits FIRST. So the speed of light would be ``000681'' miles/second, if the Eldar had reckoned in miles. I have not experimented with the "meta" possibilities for this font, although I have made something of an attempt to parametrize most of the glyphs. You are encouraged to experiment with the parameter settings and are *DEFINITELY* encouraged to send me any interesting settings (and changes that might be required to accomodate those settings). Mike Urban ...!trwrb!trwspp!spp2!urban ...!vortex!trwspp!spp2!urban