85552
Published: 9th November, 2013
Last edited: 9th November, 2013
Created: 9th November, 2013
Clone of Genj-mon var. 2, and Genj-mon var. 1, and Genji-mon. :)
My third smooth interpretation of those pretty glyphs, and also the most far from original one.This is a clone of Genj-mon var. 2
40551
Published: 9th November, 2013
Last edited: 26th February, 2014
Created: 9th November, 2013
Clone of Genji-mon var. 1 and Genji-mon.
My another smooth interpretation of those pretty glyphs. This one is without intersections.This is a clone of Genji-mon var. 1
63551
Published: 9th November, 2013
Last edited: 9th November, 2013
Created: 9th November, 2013
Clone of Genji-mon.
My smooth interpretation of these pretty glyphs.This is a clone of Genji-mon
223545
Published: 28th December, 2011
Last edited: 26th December, 2011
Created: 26th December, 2011
Font representing the Genji-mon (so called because they were used to mark each chapter of the world’s first novel, the Genji monogatari), a system of symbols which indicate all the possible groupings and subgroupings of five elements.
They were used in kumikō, a japanese ceremony/game about guessing different types of incense by smell.
The number of all combinations of five elements is 52, but I reproduced the 54 symbols used to mark the Genji monogatari chapters, which contain the same symbol in two variations and a made-up one as well.
I did the font because I think it was perfect for Fontstruct. But if you need something more polished, and in four different styles, there is it.