NcodeX Project, open-access Dataset 3 (DS-03): Class A: halved/elongated-open narrow signs (mostly symmetrical)
by Carlos Pallan Gayol  
posted Feb/26/2021
This dataset entails Glyphset-Class A halved/elongated-open narrow signs (mostly symmetrical).Research tools for the study of Postclassic sign-repertoire.
How to cite this Dataset:
Pallan Gayol, Carlos;
2021 Open_access Dataset DS-03: Research materials for developing Phase-II codical fonts
Project NcodeX.  Published online on 2/26/2021, available at URL: www.ncodex.org/Dataset_DS03.php
image attributions:
Vectorial renderings with red outlines (font characters): by Carlos Pallan 2017-2020Codex Dresdensis: (public domain) facsimilar edition by Ernst W. Förstemann 1892
Codex Tro-Cortesianus: (fascimilar edition ADEVA/Graz 1967, Vol. 8 series CODICES)
Segments (crops) of individual glyphs and blocks reproduced for research purposes only. © Akademische Druck - u. Verlagsanstalt - Graz.
Publicly-available images of the complete Madrid Codex available at FAMSIL Codex Peresianus © Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF). Segments (crops) of individual glyphs and blocks
reproduced for research purposes only. Courtesy of the Department of Reproductions, © Bibliothèque nationale de France. Département des Manuscrits: Mexicain 386.
For high-quality open-access images of this codex, please visit the insitutional page of the Bibliothèque nationale de France
The NcodeX Project is a collaboration between the University of California at Berkeley, the University of Bonn, Germany, the Script Encoding Initiative (SEI), the Unicode Consortium and other partner institutions.
This project was made possible by a Digital Humanities Advancement Grant (HAA-268887-20) from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and with support from Unicode’s Adopt A Character program (AAC-Mayan-2019 and -2021).
This project was made possible by a Digital Humanities Advancement Grant (HAA-268887-20) from the National Endowment for the Humanities; two AAC grants from the Unicode Consortium, and a Dan C. Hazen Fellowship from SALALM.
SEI work on Maya hieroglyphs has received support from NEH grant PR‐253360‐17 and PR-268710-20, as well as a Google Research grant
This project was made possible by a Digital Humanities Advancement Grant (HAA-268887-20) from the National Endowment for the Humanities; two AAC grants from the Unicode Consortium, and a Dan C. Hazen Fellowship from SALALM.
SEI work on Maya hieroglyphs has received support from NEH grant PR‐253360‐17 and PR-268710-20, as well as a Google Research grant
Special thanks to Matthews Rechs and Christopher Chapman
at Adobe Inc. for supporting our Project with complimentary
Creative Cloud licenses that enhance several aspects of our worklows
at Adobe Inc. for supporting our Project with complimentary
Creative Cloud licenses that enhance several aspects of our worklows