Document Type
Article
Abstract
Fraktur is an American folk art developed by German-speaking communities in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, Virginia, Maryland, and North Carolina during the 18th and 19th centuries. This art form features ornate calligraphy combined with illustrations of flowers, birds, angels, and geometric border designs. It was often used for birth and baptismal certificates, religious texts, educational materials, and public notices. Fraktur commonly incorporates frieze pattern designs. Artistic designs based on frieze patterns appear across a wide range of cultures, and research has shown that cultural groups tend to favor certain types of frieze patterns. This paper investigates which types of frieze symmetries appear most frequently in a sample of print and hand-drawn fraktur works and compares these distributions to those found in other traditions.
Recommended Citation
Koss, Lorelei
(2025)
"Frieze Symmetry Patterns of Pennsylvania German Fraktur,"
LASER Journal: Vol. 3:
Iss.
1.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/laser-journal/vol3/iss1/1
Included in
American Art and Architecture Commons, Book and Paper Commons, Illustration Commons, Other Mathematics Commons