Ever notice hand-written signs with letters in all-caps, except for the letter L? It looks like an uppercase i ...
WHY DO PEOPlE WRITE lIKE THIS?
Friday, July 01, 2011
PROUD SlUT
Megan M. of Cleveland, Ohio, was proud to discover this PROUD "SlUT" in the BBC News article, Why is the word 'SlUT' so powerful? I was almost going to take this female empowering movement seriously, until they screwed up with the lowercase L.
"There’s a girl who’s not afraid to be herself. Siuts unite! No need to hide it! Just embrace it. The haters are just jealous." — Megan M.
Wednesday, June 29, 2011
Whole Belly ClAMS
Jeff adds to the ClAM COllECTIVE with these OPEN WHOLE BELLY ClAMS, discovered on Boston Post Road in Westbrook, CT. Ironically, Jeff was just there for the Prime RLB.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Found by Father-in-lAW
When I met my now wife Malya, part of my responsibility as a suitor was trying to impress her father. Now that Malya and I are married, and my father-in-law knows that I am the infamous blogger behind lowercase L-gate, the tables are turned! After nearly a year of searching, Arthur Kurzweil, achieving one of the greatest highlights of his modest career, finally discovered a Class A lowercase L, and it was closer to home than he could have imagined. Residents of Great Neck, NY might get lost on their way to Century Inc. at 33 ARRANDAlE AVE. Perhaps for the better.
Thursday, June 23, 2011
GlOBAL Traveller
In the spirit of Cory Arcangel's "Sorry I Haven't Posted" blog, cataloguing lazy bloggers' posts in which they apologize for not blogging ... SORRY I HAVEN'T POSTED! My only excuse is that I've been busy trying to make a living as an artist, travelling, and being sued over my cartoons in New Mexico ... long story, I'll save it for another time.
Anyway, I have a backlog of your lowercase L's that need to be shared with the world, if we are ever going to blow the lid off this worldwide capital conspiracy.
So to restart, here's one of my own. I noticed this late-edition lowercase L on the Open Space Technology bulletin board at the ROI Summit 2011 for Jewish innovation in Jerusalem this summer. Fellow conference attendee Shelby snapped this photo for me, "IS THERE A NEED FOR GlOBAL JEWISH UNIT?" (I'm assuming that was meant to be UNITY, based on the punny topic header which I can just make out as JEWNITY ... and the fact that a Global Jewish Unit is HIGHLY unnecessary). This GlOBAL disaster may be a result of post-haste afterthought, but there's still no excuse.
Except INSANITY.
Thursday, December 30, 2010
RIP Bob
I came to be friends with Bob, an NYC native Park Slope resident of 50 years, in 2004, when, once a week, I started helping him carry groceries up to his fourth floor single bedroom apartment on Garfield. Crippled from a severe inguinal hernia that went untreated in the 1980's, Bob wasn't always that hunched over panhandler who took frequent sitting breaks on milk crates in the middle of the aisles while grocery shopping at Key Food. In his glory days, Bob was an audio technician, and sold hi-fi stereo systems for Sam Goody. He was an avid appreciator of classical music, and had an extensive collection on vintage reel-to-reel tape. And you wouldn't know it if you saw the gaunt, wispy white haired man with his huddled, shuffling gate, but Bob stood over six feet tall, and was a fiery redhead.
In the last few months, Bob's health declined and he stopped going outside. I'd do his grocery shopping for him — his diet consisted largely of Utz Onion and Garlic Flavored Potato Chips (never Wise, they have the highest brown spot ratio of all the chip brands), green bananas, and sour cream. After he took a nasty fall in his apartment, I visited him at New York Methodist Hospital. He was full of self-pity, but cracked a toothless smile when I introduced him to my new wife. "You're a midget!" he exclaimed after looking Malya up and down, all 5 feet of her. "But she's very pretty", he said to me, aside, as if Malya couldn't hear.
The day before he died, Bob called me to complain, lamenting that he didn't want to be in the hospital anymore. I could hear the life leaving him, and I knew he couldn't come home. Desperate, Bob begged me to spring him from that joint, any way I could. I spoke to the administrators to see if they would authorize his release, but in his condition it wasn't going to happen.
"I have no friends," Bob said, "Nobody cares."
Bob was wrong.
Robert Schindler, January 11, 1934 – December 23, 2010
Labels:
BROOKlYN,
PARK SlOPE
Location:
Park Slope, Brooklyn, NY, USA
Monday, November 29, 2010
H.V. ElECT
Our lowercase L mission may seem frivolous at times, but when an important message like H.V. ElECT. is made difficult to understand, it's no joke. That stands for High Voltage Electricity, but by the time you figure out that word doesn't say "eiect" ... ZAP! Thanks for this warning, Rimpy.
Friday, November 19, 2010
VAllEY of the DOllS
The doll on the left reaches out to Alden, who found this eerie display in Gatlinburg, TN. She beckons for help, as her Clothes SOlD Separately.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010
LATIN SCHOOl in PAlESTINE
Is this a "crunch case", in which the sign maker had space for all but a final uppercase L and had to resort to the lowercase? This LATIN TAYBEH SECONDARY SCHOOl in Ramallah, Palestine, knows about uppercase L's, as in LATIN, so this lowercase L was probably the result of poor planning. If the English portion had been assembled right to left, as the Arabic portion of the sign, the sign maker may have had to resort to a lowercase S.
This street signage can probably be found nearby.
This street signage can probably be found nearby.
Tuesday, November 09, 2010
AUTO SAlE
Sheila thought that Cortez Auto Sales Inc. got away with it this time, by slipping in a little foot on the otherwise lowercase L in WWW.CORTEZAUTOSAlE.COM. But look again, and you'll see that they remain guilty as charged in the next line down with their abbreviated TElS.
Friday, November 05, 2010
TGIJ
After running this blog for over 5 years, the substitution of an uppercase i for an uppercase L has become so familiar that it no longer surprises or frightens me. In fact, I've become so used to the typographical phenomenon that I now accept that approximately one percent of the world's uppercase i's are intended to be an L. So when I encountered this image of the title page from Christopher Marlowe's play, THE IEW OF MALTA, from 1589, it was like discovering a new species of flying insect in a rainforest.
Sometimes written as THE RICH IEVV OF MALTA, I wondered why the title hadn't simply used a J and W, as THE JEW OF MALTA. It seems the typesetters had uppercase J's, as in MAJESTIES. And it looks like they used an actual W in WAS PLAYD instead of a double-V.
After doing a little research online, I believe the substitution of I for J may be the way typesetters avoided having letters descend below the baseline of type. It could also be a result of I and J represented as a single glyph in the digraph combination of IJ, an example of a typographical ligature. Apparently the letter J developed as a swash of the letter i.
Why would I present a case of I-for-J on a blog dedicated exclusively to the substitution of I for L? I believe the IJ may shed some light on our IL. From this scrap of a 16th century manuscript alone, we have an opportunity to learn something about how the human mind used to work, and continues to work, when writing and setting type, and the desire to cut corners — and swashes — to save writing space or typesetting materials.
Shabbat Shalom from the IEVV OF BROOKlYN!
Sometimes written as THE RICH IEVV OF MALTA, I wondered why the title hadn't simply used a J and W, as THE JEW OF MALTA. It seems the typesetters had uppercase J's, as in MAJESTIES. And it looks like they used an actual W in WAS PLAYD instead of a double-V.
After doing a little research online, I believe the substitution of I for J may be the way typesetters avoided having letters descend below the baseline of type. It could also be a result of I and J represented as a single glyph in the digraph combination of IJ, an example of a typographical ligature. Apparently the letter J developed as a swash of the letter i.
Why would I present a case of I-for-J on a blog dedicated exclusively to the substitution of I for L? I believe the IJ may shed some light on our IL. From this scrap of a 16th century manuscript alone, we have an opportunity to learn something about how the human mind used to work, and continues to work, when writing and setting type, and the desire to cut corners — and swashes — to save writing space or typesetting materials.
Shabbat Shalom from the IEVV OF BROOKlYN!
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