a full video from a left handed calygrapher explaining how he adapts the strokes would be amazing for us. I struggle a lot trying and I sure will appreciate some hints from someone who has done that path before. thanks
And my final fear about being left-handed is gone with this vieo. I always thought I could never learn how to do this because of being left-handed. Thank you for the video :3
So glad I found this video, it really eased my thoughts :') When I was trying to write hiragana for the first time I realized that it felt odd since I'm left-handed and got worried if I would never be as good as my right-handed classmates. But now I know I can improve just as much as them with lots of practice.
Thank you, this is very interesting. I was a leftie that was forced to be right dominant, and am relearning how to use my left hand again. I can eat using chopsticks and write with my left hand (with more effort), but my writing is mirror imaged now so that I drag the pen the correct way instead of pushing (it comes naturally for me to do this). I was seeing if anyone else does this (besides Da Vinci), and if calligraphy is possible with the left hand.
As someone who is ethnically Chinese & born left-handed, I remember the struggles of learning stroke orders from someone who is right-handed. I became ambidextrous as a result but prefer to use my right hand more now for some reason
Thanks so much for this video. I’m a occidental modern caligrapher, and yesterday i received a japanese calligraphy set. So i want to learn shodo, but i’m leftie, and i think that was a problem to do it.
I am left-handed and have not encountered a single problem in writing Chinese Calligraphy. I write the in Clerical Script style of the Han Dynasty. The Basic Stroke is “1” which consists of a “worm's head and ends in a goose tail’. Many Chinese calligraphers cannot write the basic stroke properly. I have mastered this stroke.
I've practised Chinese character calligraphy and as manuals are pretty much useless I follow the direction and sequence of the strokes, and pretty much it's not as complicated.
The problem is that you'll never see what's going on because the hand is always above the character. I'm a left-handed though lol. I'll practice with the right hand.
I'm left-handed and thank you for considering and looking to help us lefties. I do have hard time writing Kanji correctly.
a full video from a left handed calygrapher explaining how he adapts the strokes would be amazing for us. I struggle a lot trying and I sure will appreciate some hints from someone who has done that path before. thanks
+Albert Anguela got it.
@@Gohitsushodostudiodid you do a video? I couldn’t find one
Greets!
And my final fear about being left-handed is gone with this vieo. I always thought I could never learn how to do this because of being left-handed. Thank you for the video :3
+Bertuğ Manavoğlu you're welcome!
So glad I found this video, it really eased my thoughts :') When I was trying to write hiragana for the first time I realized that it felt odd since I'm left-handed and got worried if I would never be as good as my right-handed classmates. But now I know I can improve just as much as them with lots of practice.
Would love to learn as a left handed writer
Thank you, this is very interesting. I was a leftie that was forced to be right dominant, and am relearning how to use my left hand again. I can eat using chopsticks and write with my left hand (with more effort), but my writing is mirror imaged now so that I drag the pen the correct way instead of pushing (it comes naturally for me to do this). I was seeing if anyone else does this (besides Da Vinci), and if calligraphy is possible with the left hand.
All the lefties say: yaaaaay!
glad to know i still have hope for writing japanese characters correctly!
As someone who is ethnically Chinese & born left-handed, I remember the struggles of learning stroke orders from someone who is right-handed. I became ambidextrous as a result but prefer to use my right hand more now for some reason
I am both ~ ambidextrous ~ thank you Jennie
I may be left handed but I'm thinking to do both as well
I'm semi ambidextrous
Thanks so much for this video. I’m a occidental modern caligrapher, and yesterday i received a japanese calligraphy set. So i want to learn shodo, but i’m leftie, and i think that was a problem to do it.
I am left-handed and have not encountered a single problem in writing Chinese Calligraphy. I write the in Clerical Script style of the Han Dynasty. The Basic Stroke is “1” which consists of a “worm's head and ends in a goose tail’. Many Chinese calligraphers cannot write the basic stroke properly. I have mastered this stroke.
Hi do you feel about being left handed in your countfy.?
@@richsmith3300 I feel great! It has never caused me any problems or inconvenience.
I have tons of calligraphy videos on UA-cam beginning with the basic stroke.
Hey, I was wondering if you got a favourite style that you like to write the most?
I like Gyosho the most.
Esteban Martinez uh, looks like that
Me too
I've practised Chinese character calligraphy and as manuals are pretty much useless I follow the direction and sequence of the strokes, and pretty much it's not as complicated.
no wonder it's been so difficult for me to replicate kanji brush strokes... I'm a leftie xD I should have watched this video first...
The problem is that you'll never see what's going on because the hand is always above the character. I'm a left-handed though lol. I'll practice with the right hand.
I’m Left Handed
I'm left handed
I'm left handed and the most difficult strokes for me to brush are the "dots".
Yeah!
I'm a left handed person
汉语比日本语好很多。
But I used to be ambidextrous
:')