A small medieval marginal drawing goes on an adventure through various books and written texts, all the way up through the present.
I edited images with Canva, including the credits and title card, then created my video using OpenShot. Narration was self-recorded using Audacity; I also used one personal photograph, taken for purposes of this project, featuring calligraphy that I did myself. See below for full asset credits.
Audio Assets:
Narration recorded by me; all rights reserved.
Pages Flipping, by lucaslara, CC 0
Spectaculum Medieval, by vvsmusic, CC BY-NC-SA 3.0
Letterpress_Heidelberger, by shapingwaves, CC BY 4.0
scrape frenzy 3 by patchen, CC BY 3.0
Visual Assets (public domain, unless otherwise noted):
Royal 3 D VI, the Ashridge Petrus Comestor, via the British Library (f.69v, 93r, 234r).
Additional MS 8785, De proprietatibus rerum, via the British Library (f.73v).
Additional MS 10293, Lancelot du Lac, via the British Library (f.66v).
Additional MS 19587, Divina commedia, via the British Library (f.4r).
MS 22 (86.ML571), Book of Hours, via the Getty Museum (f.3r).
MS Ludwig I 13 (83.MA.62), Bible, via the Getty Museum (f.64r).
Gutenberg Bible leaf, via Miami University Libraries (verso).
MS Ludwig VI 2 (83.MH.85), Gradual, via the Getty Museum (f.1r).
MS M.493, the Black Hours, via the Morgan Library & Museum (f.24v, 25r, 54v, 55r).
MS W.494, the Lace Book of Marie de’ Medici, via the Walters Art Museum (f.5v, 17v).
Personal photo, Elizabeth M. B., all rights reserved.