
Below is the first iteration of the approach we wanted to take. Since children are always surrounded by emojis or emoticons in the numerous apps they navigate, it felt right to make the characters look like our standard emojis so that children find them a bit more relatable and intriguing. We went ahead with the approach with brown lines separating the fingers so that there is no room for ambiguity.


Below is the entire set of letters from the English alphabet in accordance to the official Indian Sign Language mandates.


























Once the characters were complete, our designer put them together in a playful template for the handbook to be circulated among our learners.




CREDITS
AD: Archana Rajagopal
GD: Adreesh Sen
All rights are owned by Crejo.fun and no asset may be reproduced without any consent from Crejo.fun.
GD: Adreesh Sen
All rights are owned by Crejo.fun and no asset may be reproduced without any consent from Crejo.fun.