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What is Braille?
Get a feel for Braille at The Maryland School for the Blind!

Braille is a tactile reading system used to present text to a reader who has a visual impairment.

The system is based on a cell of six raised dots providing for 64 possible combinations. The dots that comprise the cells are dome-shaped and are about one sixth, or 16 thousandths (.016) of an inch high. The cells are spaced nearly one tenth (.09) inch apart and each takes up one quarter inch (.25) of horizontal line space. Braille lines are spaced four tenths (.4) of an inch apart, providing about two and one half lines per inch.

(Source: New Programmed Instruction in Braille, second edition, by Ashcroft, Henderson, Sanford and Koenig: SCALARS Publishing; 1994.)

See your name in Braille!

For many individuals with visual impairments, Braille is their primary method of communication. It may take some students several years to master Braille. Have you ever wondered what Braille looks like? Let us show you! Simply type your name, a word or phrase in the box below and you will see it appear on your screen in Braille.

Type your name, a phrase or sentence in the box below.

See if you can decode this message written in Braille:

Click here for an online Braille card.
Click here to find out what the above message says.

To request a Braille card (containing the Braille alphabet/number system and a message to decode), contact:
Taiisha Pinkney, Public Relations Manager
410.319.5722
TaiishaP@mdschblind.org

The Maryland School for the Blind

3501 Taylor Avenue | Baltimore, MD 21236
phone 410 444-5000 | fax 410 319-5700
info@mdschblind.org