If you own one book on this topic, let it be Khatibi & Sijelmassi’s The Splendour of Islamic Calligraphy . If you own two, add Sheila Blair’s Islamic Calligraphy . And if you own three, you are already hunting for a first edition of Mehdi Bayani’s Ahvāl o Āsār-e Khoshnevisān (The States and Works of Calligraphers) – in which case, this post is merely a mirror to your own passion. Do you have a rare calligraphy manual or a favorite museum catalog? Share the title in the comments—the world of qalam and qirtas is best explored together.
In the silent, graceful curves of a Bismillah or the vertical ascents of a Nasta‘liq poem, one finds not just words, but the soul of two great civilizations. Collecting books on Persian and Arabic calligraphy is more than amassing literature—it is a pursuit of understanding how the divine, the poetic, and the mathematical converge on a single page. Persian and Arabic Calligraphy Book Collection ...
This post explores the essential layers of building, studying, and appreciating a collection of calligraphy books, from 10th-century Kufic manuscripts to contemporary digital analysis. Before examining the books, one must understand the stylistic DNA that separates—and unites—these two traditions. If you own one book on this topic,