I've spent the last few years working hard to improve my handwriting, and I literally started by getting a couple of basic handwriting workbooks meant for kindergarteners and working through those with a pencil. It was surprisingly helpful!
This is one of the most candid, down-to-earth handwriting tips video I've watched in a while. It's genuinely convincing! I might actually just do that, 20 mins a day, start small, no pressure, and see where we go from there!
I loved the way my dad signed his name. 1st initial, 2nd initial, last name. I practiced, and practiced until I was happy with the result. Years later I donated an unused car, signed the title over that way and mailed it in. They returned the title, "That's not a signature!" Later I sent it to National Public Radio instead. No problem.
They don't do this any more, but my Primary Doctor used to sign my prescriptions with a line that had a meager bump or two in it. Now it's all computer driven. I don't even get a piece of paper any more, just an email if even that. Eventually we'll get our meds delivered by matter transporter while we lie insensate on the living room couch like the living-dead. 😵
I was an exchange student in high school (I’m in US and went to France.) I loved that the “standard” (Seyes French) handwriting was so pretty! I always wanted prettier handwriting, and this gave me something to use and learn. My handwriting is basically now the Seyes French with some letters made to my own style. I always get compliments on it, which I love because I worked so hard to have nice handwriting (I’m no artist, and so to be able to do that feels great.) You can print out copies of ‘standard’ French handwriting (and also get the French notebooks they use in school which are 2mm graph inside of 8 mm graphs with the Horizontal line often being darker. It really helps for getting the letter heights right…if that’s important to you. Taking a calligraphy course is a great idea! I learn better in person (so I’ll look in the area) but I’ll use your link if I don’t. The other thing that I’ve done is print out the alphabet (Caps/lower case/numbers/characters) from Pages (Mac’s Word) and put them into a notebook for reference. You get about 100 fonts, and some fun ones like “typewriter” and others I can easily print off, glue into a notebook and use for reference. I’ve used a light pad (or use tracing paper if you have that) to write over it if I’m struggling. It’s given me some more interesting ways to make headers and things in my planner. Have a good pen…it doesn’t have to be expensive, just one that’s comfortable to use and slides over the paper well…you don’t want to be fighting with the pen and paper and having things not work because of that. Thanks for the video and I love your writing!
I learned handwriting in elementary school during the sixties. I started using a fountain pen while in the third grade. I’m eager to get back to it. New sub!!
I am so glad that you, a reviewer of fountain pens, focus on beautiful handwriting. No matter how interesting others may be when talking about fountain pens, when the ink hits the paper and chicken scratching appear, I cannot watch any further. I guess that is the difference between a “hobbyist collector” and a connoisseur of fine pens.
This video made me a subscriber!! Straight to the point and basic things to do. I think we fountain pen lovers tend to overthink and feel we have to be elaborate and over the top because we are using FP when we really don't.
Your handwriting has improved tremendously. I have had to learn, or should I say, relearn how to write again that is legible. My wife told me she couldn't read it anymore. Definitely chicken scratch. My #1 rule is to s l o w down. Take time to write. My journalling is primarily my practice session. It has taken time but it is getting better.
Thanks for this inspiring video. I just took up writing with fountain pens again. The last 6-7 months I have practiced to improve my handwriting. It´s been a few years since i wrote with anything else than rollerballs. My handwriting deteriated slowly, and I could just not reed what I just wrote. I write every day now, and things are really looking better.
Hey, your writing really has improved. I watched a lot of your older videos, and seeing this now, the improvement is clear. I would also recommend Palmer method for business penmanship for "normal" cursive writing. On the other hand, what you suggested is more ornamental penmanship, which is also nice but might not be suitable for everyday. Thanks for the video
Since getting interested in fountain pens a couple years ago I’ve been trying to improve my handwriting. That’s one of the reasons I started using fountain pens. I try to practise as much as I can, writing letters to friends and family, but I can’t say I’ve improved much. Mostly I just have to slow down. I find my writing gets worse towards the end of a long letter because I’m just rushing to finish. Also, I have trouble writing on a thick pad or notebook… when I get to the end of a line and I can’t rest my hand on the page anymore, everything turns to crap.
You have the feeling that you are practicing and practicing and not getting anywhere. This is exactly where some calligraphy lessons would help. Someone to look over your shoulder and give you a little advice. (They might just say that the table is too low for you or something similar). I am also convinced that your handwriting has changed. Perhaps not (yet) to the extent that you imagined, but progress will certainly be visible.
My handwriting got very bad when I was at school, trying to keep up when taking notes. I managed to improve it by taking a leaf out of my Dad's book and learning the classic Italic hand (which is similar to, but not the same as, the Italic hand taught in North American schools) - and I still have my Sheaffer No Nonsense fountain pen with what they call an "italic fine" nib from back then, which seems to write a downstroke about 1mm wide. Then I slipped back to my old scribble when I was at University - even more pressure to write fast. Now, thirty-nine years later, I am beginning to try to improve again. My favourite things to write when I want to practice now are poems I remember enjoying at school, or the first fourteen verses from St John's Gospel using the King James wording (because, again, fond memories from being in the school choir and hearing the Headmaster reading that passage out when we did the Cambridge Service of Nine Lessons and Carols)
Hello DB! THANKS for the great tips on improving one's handwriting! Back in the 1970's one learned to write cursive in grade school. There was no penmanship class for me until Junior High (now usually called middle school) ONE semester in english class we had some penmanship. The only problem was, if you picked up any bad habits during the other six or seven years, it wasn't enough. Sort of too little, too late! I wish that we had been made to use some sort of fountain pens at the beginning. I think it would have sort of forced a slower, more deliberate approach to forming letters and words. You put ballpoint pens in the hands of first or second graders, they might just think (like myself) that speed is the key and develop a scribbling form of handwriting. I have been practicing and have already improved my writing a lot, but still need LOTS of work to get to where you are. LOVE your writing!
Thank you for directing me to this video. I will be watching the calligraphy lesson video too. I dont want to be a calligrapher either but I do want better handwriting for letters I am going to start writing to friends and family. I think learning the calligraphy strokes will make the letters that little bit more special.
Great video! I've been working on my connective slant - the space between letters that extends the physical length of the word. My handwriting has become a lot less compressed.
Great advice. As you hinted near the end, if you have numerous pens, swap them regularly. E.g. writing with a Pilot and a Sailor are very different experiences. I've managed to tidy up my handwriting quite a bit with my Pilots, but as soon as I pick up my Sailor PG it all goes to pot lol.
YES -- I can't agree enough with this. I've got a couple pens all with different grips and balance, and switching between them helps so much. You learn how to write, not just how to write with one particular pen.
Excellent video. I need to spend more time with my mindful writing. I have been concentrating on notetaking, i.e. making it small, ledgible, and pleasing to read. Chinese steel nibs that are either stiff or a little soft have gotten so good from xxxf to M that I have been switching out steel nibs on my favorite nib holders, i.e. my Opus 88 pens, and leonardos.. And replacing any Jowo feed with feeds that flow more gernerously. Writing small and fast and ledgibly has gotten possible for me. It does take daily practice. Thanks for the push to get better at classical cursive. I almost gave up a few years ago as nibs I could afford just weren't getting any better. Now, it seems to be a golden age of nibs.
I changed my capital F recently because the way I was taught was too similar to T. Try something like your A, with a smaller upstroke, from about the median line to the top and down to the baseline, then lift and cross at the median. Simple, elegant, and legible.
Loved the video DB, it very helpful. One video I'd like to see is on how to setup and adjust an oblique calligraphy pen - in my case I have a Tom's Studio Original Flourish. I'm finding it hard to judge the angle it should be set at for my style of writing.
Hey Doodle Bud a great video and very informative. At the end of the day for me definitely it’s all about the handwriting. I love the letter F but not in duplicate. Double L also tricky. I like squared paper the most, bullet point paper second best. Thank you very much D
I wonder if you noticed any difference in your writing depending on what music you are playing while writing?? For me I noted that my letters get a little more pointing if the music is aggresive like metal or such... and more rounded if softer music.. Btw. Thank you for the A I stole that some time ago 😉 Keep up the great work
I wonder what your handwriting would look like if you listened to the full version of Iron Butterfly's "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida". If you were a student in my elementary school classroom, you would be receiving a penmanship award complete with a fountain pen, a bottle of ink and a bulb syringe.
In regard for “getting in the zone,” Ted Gioia talks about music and trances and how it takes around 10 minutes for our brains to reach that altered state: “And in almost every instance the musical ritual involving rhythm has to last at least around ten minutes before we get the trance benefit.” So it makes sense that it’s easier to get into the zone with instrumental music that is either very long or selected to repeat over and over. ua-cam.com/video/IQpeKZE8iXA/v-deo.html
I do find this enjoyable, but also quite amusing. I pretty much grew up writing with a fountain pen. Most all of my school work was written in fountain pen, and all of my university work apart from my final dissertation. I have my junior school teachers to thank for being able to write fairly fast and efficiently whilst still keeping it legible and reasonably stylish. The idea of taking that long just to write two words kind of blows my mind. I enjoy my writing, but it has to more or less keep up with my thoughts or it doesn't really work for me. Each to their own - there is no right or wrong way.
Pilot Custom 912 with FA nib. The pen has an aftermarket feed and the nib was custom ground as well. I have a video of the nibmeister doing the grind work: ua-cam.com/video/CncfAKkaS14/v-deo.html
Doodlebud, there is a really nice Italian non-Visconti pen i want to buy for myself, but send to you for review first since no one else has. Are you interested and how would i go about doing that if so?
As a lefty i have seen videos to help with smeering ink while i try to practice my writing. But i find myself falling straight back to my accustomed quick drying ink style. So have started learning to use my right hand, i cant remember learning to write being so difficult in the first place.
Hi Both, I don't know if it's a N.American thing but in the UK, practice is a noun; the verb is to practise. Great to see how long it actually takes others to write nicely! I've always felt like I should be able to write beautifully and fast. At school and uni I focused so much on speed and legibility rather than beauty. You forget how long it can take to make things that are beautiful.
I can't focus when listening to music, I start analyzing it -- hearing the chords, following the melody (and hearing where the notes are relative to the harmony....), (partially) transcribing the bass or keyboard part.... Mary musicians are like this. Music as background dos not exist for me.
This came at the perfect time as I'd just gotten my Falcon in a sef but watching how your FA nib writes by comparison, I realize thay I may have made an expensive mistake :(
Improving your writing cost $0 which is great news! Its like getting a guitar, you need to learn to play it. The question is how well do you want to be able to play?
Considering I actually play guitar, that is something I completely understand. An instrument is an instrument. It's up to me to make sure I understand the intricacies of each and make using them second nature. Definitely more motivated to do both now!
Although I think that calligraphy can have a positive influence on one's handwriting, there - at least, to me - is a difference between the two: Handwriting should be practical whereas calligraphy should be ornate. Just imagine having a really great idea and taking ages to express it in copperplate!
For me, the music won't work. I play a few instruments, so I get sucked into music when I hear it. There I am focusing on my penmanship, and suddenly my brain is going, "What key is this in? The tempo is a little fast. Did they just go into the relative minor via V of vi or a diminished? Blah blah blah," and suddenly I'm just sitting there doing nothing and staring into space. 🤣 Like music though, I find the key is slow, results-oriented practice while focusing on relaxation. You must do the drills slowly enough that you can remain aware of and eradicate any tension from your arm, hand, and wrist. As a left-hander, I internalized SO MUCH TENSION to the point of ulnar nerve pain, numbness in my hand, and cramping through never having been taught to write properly. (It's only by writing literally upside-down that I managed to have good handwriting, and now it looks very nice, and I'm lucky in that rotating/reflecting things in my head is easy-peasy for me.) I had 58 years of tension, poor instruction, right-side desks, and bad habits to undo. Like playing an instrument, everything is about getting the best possible result with the least possible effort. Go slow, and RELAX. If it looks good and feels good, it is good.
The pen is like an instrument. You need to learn how to use it, and the decide how well to you want to be able to play understanding improvement only comes after effort
Finally, I can use these tips to add some sophistication to my Skibidi Toilet and Among Us crossover fanfiction I'm writing with my 一分钱,一分货 rollerball!
They just magnify what you see. Its no different than using binoculars to get a bitter image of something far away or using a magnifying glass or loupe for seeing finer details . You only use them for up close. If you wear them around things will be blurry as they aren't mean for that working distance.
I've spent the last few years working hard to improve my handwriting, and I literally started by getting a couple of basic handwriting workbooks meant for kindergarteners and working through those with a pencil. It was surprisingly helpful!
This is one of the most candid, down-to-earth handwriting tips video I've watched in a while. It's genuinely convincing! I might actually just do that, 20 mins a day, start small, no pressure, and see where we go from there!
I loved the way my dad signed his name. 1st initial, 2nd initial, last name. I practiced, and practiced until I was happy with the result. Years later I donated an unused car, signed the title over that way and mailed it in. They returned the title, "That's not a signature!" Later I sent it to National Public Radio instead. No problem.
How can they determine what's a signature or not. I sign so much stuff daily it's squiggle with a line across it😂
They don't do this any more, but my Primary Doctor used to sign my prescriptions with a line that had a meager bump or two in it. Now it's all computer driven. I don't even get a piece of paper any more, just an email if even that. Eventually we'll get our meds delivered by matter transporter while we lie insensate on the living room couch like the living-dead. 😵
I was an exchange student in high school (I’m in US and went to France.) I loved that the “standard” (Seyes French) handwriting was so pretty! I always wanted prettier handwriting, and this gave me something to use and learn. My handwriting is basically now the Seyes French with some letters made to my own style. I always get compliments on it, which I love because I worked so hard to have nice handwriting (I’m no artist, and so to be able to do that feels great.) You can print out copies of ‘standard’ French handwriting (and also get the French notebooks they use in school which are 2mm graph inside of 8 mm graphs with the Horizontal line often being darker. It really helps for getting the letter heights right…if that’s important to you. Taking a calligraphy course is a great idea! I learn better in person (so I’ll look in the area) but I’ll use your link if I don’t. The other thing that I’ve done is print out the alphabet (Caps/lower case/numbers/characters) from Pages (Mac’s Word) and put them into a notebook for reference. You get about 100 fonts, and some fun ones like “typewriter” and others I can easily print off, glue into a notebook and use for reference. I’ve used a light pad (or use tracing paper if you have that) to write over it if I’m struggling. It’s given me some more interesting ways to make headers and things in my planner. Have a good pen…it doesn’t have to be expensive, just one that’s comfortable to use and slides over the paper well…you don’t want to be fighting with the pen and paper and having things not work because of that. Thanks for the video and I love your writing!
I learned handwriting in elementary school during the sixties. I started using a fountain pen while in the third grade. I’m eager to get back to it. New sub!!
I am so glad that you, a reviewer of fountain pens, focus on beautiful handwriting. No matter how interesting others may be when talking about fountain pens, when the ink hits the paper and chicken scratching appear, I cannot watch any further. I guess that is the difference between a “hobbyist collector” and a connoisseur of fine pens.
You should do a part 2 of this video with tips to improve print handwriting. I quite like your print
This video made me a subscriber!! Straight to the point and basic things to do. I think we fountain pen lovers tend to overthink and feel we have to be elaborate and over the top because we are using FP when we really don't.
Your handwriting has improved tremendously. I have had to learn, or should I say, relearn how to write again that is legible. My wife told me she couldn't read it anymore. Definitely chicken scratch.
My #1 rule is to s l o w down. Take time to write. My journalling is primarily my practice session. It has taken time but it is getting better.
Thanks for this inspiring video. I just took up writing with fountain pens again. The last 6-7 months I have practiced to improve my handwriting. It´s been a few years since i wrote with anything else than rollerballs. My handwriting deteriated slowly, and I could just not reed what I just wrote. I write every day now, and things are really looking better.
Wonderful
Hey, your writing really has improved. I watched a lot of your older videos, and seeing this now, the improvement is clear.
I would also recommend Palmer method for business penmanship for "normal" cursive writing. On the other hand, what you suggested is more ornamental penmanship, which is also nice but might not be suitable for everyday.
Thanks for the video
Since getting interested in fountain pens a couple years ago I’ve been trying to improve my handwriting. That’s one of the reasons I started using fountain pens. I try to practise as much as I can, writing letters to friends and family, but I can’t say I’ve improved much.
Mostly I just have to slow down. I find my writing gets worse towards the end of a long letter because I’m just rushing to finish.
Also, I have trouble writing on a thick pad or notebook… when I get to the end of a line and I can’t rest my hand on the page anymore, everything turns to crap.
You have the feeling that you are practicing and practicing and not getting anywhere. This is exactly where some calligraphy lessons would help. Someone to look over your shoulder and give you a little advice. (They might just say that the table is too low for you or something similar).
I am also convinced that your handwriting has changed. Perhaps not (yet) to the extent that you imagined, but progress will certainly be visible.
I find printing to be more of a challenge. Especially getting the correct spacing.
I see what some folks can do with their printing and it looks like its done by a robot!
I was literally just thinking about how nice your handwriting was yesterday and how I'd like to be able to write like that. You read my mind!
For me its now not terrible... mission accomplished LOL
My handwriting got very bad when I was at school, trying to keep up when taking notes. I managed to improve it by taking a leaf out of my Dad's book and learning the classic Italic hand (which is similar to, but not the same as, the Italic hand taught in North American schools) - and I still have my Sheaffer No Nonsense fountain pen with what they call an "italic fine" nib from back then, which seems to write a downstroke about 1mm wide. Then I slipped back to my old scribble when I was at University - even more pressure to write fast. Now, thirty-nine years later, I am beginning to try to improve again. My favourite things to write when I want to practice now are poems I remember enjoying at school, or the first fourteen verses from St John's Gospel using the King James wording (because, again, fond memories from being in the school choir and hearing the Headmaster reading that passage out when we did the Cambridge Service of Nine Lessons and Carols)
I not only enjoy your content but you have a great voice. Enjoy listening to that too.
Hello DB! THANKS for the great tips on improving one's handwriting! Back in the 1970's one learned to write cursive in grade school. There was no penmanship class for me until Junior High (now usually called middle school) ONE semester in english class we had some penmanship. The only problem was, if you picked up any bad habits during the other six or seven years, it wasn't enough. Sort of too little, too late! I wish that we had been made to use some sort of fountain pens at the beginning. I think it would have sort of forced a slower, more deliberate approach to forming letters and words. You put ballpoint pens in the hands of first or second graders, they might just think (like myself) that speed is the key and develop a scribbling form of handwriting. I have been practicing and have already improved my writing a lot, but still need LOTS of work to get to where you are. LOVE your writing!
Thank you for directing me to this video. I will be watching the calligraphy lesson video too. I dont want to be a calligrapher either but I do want better handwriting for letters I am going to start writing to friends and family. I think learning the calligraphy strokes will make the letters that little bit more special.
Wait, so collecting and buying more pens does not improve your handwriting? Oh maaaaaaaaan.
I know.... dammit! 😔
Not directly, however the pens and ink are what have kept me engaged enough to practice.
Great video! I've been working on my connective slant - the space between letters that extends the physical length of the word. My handwriting has become a lot less compressed.
Excellent
Great advice. As you hinted near the end, if you have numerous pens, swap them regularly. E.g. writing with a Pilot and a Sailor are very different experiences. I've managed to tidy up my handwriting quite a bit with my Pilots, but as soon as I pick up my Sailor PG it all goes to pot lol.
YES -- I can't agree enough with this. I've got a couple pens all with different grips and balance, and switching between them helps so much. You learn how to write, not just how to write with one particular pen.
I really struggle with 'r'. One day, I'll have it sorted.
Me too, I just can't write it the way I'd like 😕
I am addicted to your channel, I see a video I just have to click!
Thanks for the kind words!
This is the Doodlebud video I've been waiting for!
Great video. I'll definitely return to it.
Excellent video. I need to spend more time with my mindful writing. I have been concentrating on notetaking, i.e. making it small, ledgible, and pleasing to read. Chinese steel nibs that are either stiff or a little soft have gotten so good from xxxf to M that I have been switching out steel nibs on my favorite nib holders, i.e. my Opus 88 pens, and leonardos.. And replacing any Jowo feed with feeds that flow more gernerously. Writing small and fast and ledgibly has gotten possible for me. It does take daily practice. Thanks for the push to get better at classical cursive. I almost gave up a few years ago as nibs I could afford just weren't getting any better. Now, it seems to be a golden age of nibs.
Dooooooodlebud!
I changed my capital F recently because the way I was taught was too similar to T. Try something like your A, with a smaller upstroke, from about the median line to the top and down to the baseline, then lift and cross at the median. Simple, elegant, and legible.
Loved the video DB, it very helpful. One video I'd like to see is on how to setup and adjust an oblique calligraphy pen - in my case I have a Tom's Studio Original Flourish. I'm finding it hard to judge the angle it should be set at for my style of writing.
Watch the calligraphy video I referenced. Gemma from Tom's Studio talked all about that
Hey Doodle Bud a great video and very informative. At the end of the day for me definitely it’s all about the handwriting. I love the letter F but not in duplicate. Double L also tricky. I like squared paper the most, bullet point paper second best. Thank you very much D
What is that black/rhodium pen in the beginning? Sailor? Pilot?
Pilot 912
Pilot 912
@@DoodlebudThank you
I wonder if you noticed any difference in your writing depending on what music you are playing while writing??
For me I noted that my letters get a little more pointing if the music is aggresive like metal or such... and more rounded if softer music..
Btw. Thank you for the A I stole that some time ago 😉
Keep up the great work
Hmm not sure about music type. I typically listen to the same type of "chill" music while I write
@@Doodlebud maby you should give it a try... maby you are like me your handwriting is influenced by the music
I wonder what your handwriting would look like if you listened to the full version of Iron Butterfly's "In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida". If you were a student in my elementary school classroom, you would be receiving a penmanship award complete with a fountain pen, a bottle of ink and a bulb syringe.
I have all those things already so I'll pretend I was awarded those 🏆
In regard for “getting in the zone,” Ted Gioia talks about music and trances and how it takes around 10 minutes for our brains to reach that altered state: “And in almost every instance the musical ritual involving rhythm has to last at least around ten minutes before we get the trance benefit.” So it makes sense that it’s easier to get into the zone with instrumental music that is either very long or selected to repeat over and over. ua-cam.com/video/IQpeKZE8iXA/v-deo.html
I do find this enjoyable, but also quite amusing. I pretty much grew up writing with a fountain pen. Most all of my school work was written in fountain pen, and all of my university work apart from my final dissertation. I have my junior school teachers to thank for being able to write fairly fast and efficiently whilst still keeping it legible and reasonably stylish. The idea of taking that long just to write two words kind of blows my mind. I enjoy my writing, but it has to more or less keep up with my thoughts or it doesn't really work for me. Each to their own - there is no right or wrong way.
Thanks for the video. What pen and nib are you using? It has nice flex.
Pilot Custom 912 with FA nib. The pen has an aftermarket feed and the nib was custom ground as well. I have a video of the nibmeister doing the grind work:
ua-cam.com/video/CncfAKkaS14/v-deo.html
@@Doodlebud 👍
Doodlebud, there is a really nice Italian non-Visconti pen i want to buy for myself, but send to you for review first since no one else has. Are you interested and how would i go about doing that if so?
Sounds interesting
@helenmcdonnell2585 it would be. I can't think of anyone better to make the first video of it.
As a lefty i have seen videos to help with smeering ink while i try to practice my writing. But i find myself falling straight back to my accustomed quick drying ink style. So have started learning to use my right hand, i cant remember learning to write being so difficult in the first place.
Amazing video thanks!
Another great video. I learned a lot. Did I spy a 007 pen? Be careful with that one Dood.
This is the pen: ua-cam.com/video/1N96lJyg-ys/v-deo.html
Thank you.
Really nice progress Doodlebud! also you can’t just casually drop in that you arm wrestle and then say nothing else about it. 😂
Exactly 😅
💪💪
I never thought about reading glasses or headphones! Thanks!
Just everyday writing in a daily basis is a chance to practice. Go slow and you’ll see improvements.
Absolutely
Hi Both, I don't know if it's a N.American thing but in the UK, practice is a noun; the verb is to practise.
Great to see how long it actually takes others to write nicely! I've always felt like I should be able to write beautifully and fast. At school and uni I focused so much on speed and legibility rather than beauty. You forget how long it can take to make things that are beautiful.
Extra props for the Bubbles/Trailer Park Boys reference! 🤣
Pretty much the only show I watch
I can't focus when listening to music, I start analyzing it -- hearing the chords, following the melody (and hearing where the notes are relative to the harmony....), (partially) transcribing the bass or keyboard part.... Mary musicians are like this. Music as background dos not exist for me.
This came at the perfect time as I'd just gotten my Falcon in a sef but watching how your FA nib writes by comparison, I realize thay I may have made an expensive mistake :(
Improving your writing cost $0 which is great news! Its like getting a guitar, you need to learn to play it. The question is how well do you want to be able to play?
Considering I actually play guitar, that is something I completely understand. An instrument is an instrument. It's up to me to make sure I understand the intricacies of each and make using them second nature. Definitely more motivated to do both now!
Although I think that calligraphy can have a positive influence on one's handwriting, there - at least, to me - is a difference between the two: Handwriting should be practical whereas calligraphy should be ornate. Just imagine having a really great idea and taking ages to express it in copperplate!
For me, the music won't work. I play a few instruments, so I get sucked into music when I hear it. There I am focusing on my penmanship, and suddenly my brain is going, "What key is this in? The tempo is a little fast. Did they just go into the relative minor via V of vi or a diminished? Blah blah blah," and suddenly I'm just sitting there doing nothing and staring into space. 🤣
Like music though, I find the key is slow, results-oriented practice while focusing on relaxation. You must do the drills slowly enough that you can remain aware of and eradicate any tension from your arm, hand, and wrist. As a left-hander, I internalized SO MUCH TENSION to the point of ulnar nerve pain, numbness in my hand, and cramping through never having been taught to write properly. (It's only by writing literally upside-down that I managed to have good handwriting, and now it looks very nice, and I'm lucky in that rotating/reflecting things in my head is easy-peasy for me.) I had 58 years of tension, poor instruction, right-side desks, and bad habits to undo.
Like playing an instrument, everything is about getting the best possible result with the least possible effort. Go slow, and RELAX. If it looks good and feels good, it is good.
The pen is like an instrument. You need to learn how to use it, and the decide how well to you want to be able to play understanding improvement only comes after effort
I have prescription glasses but I don’t know what magnify level it is…😮
Prescription glasses are a corrective lens vs reading glasses just make things larger when viewing up close
@@Doodlebud can this be done with flex nib fountain pen the things you’d mentioned in the video?
@@Antisympathy Of course. These tips help no matter the type of nib you have. I evem used a flex nib in some the writing samples
Doooodlebud🔥🔥
You're wrong it's dooooooooooddlebud
OG fans know its ''DoodleBUDHERE!''haha, but I do love the dooooooooooodlebud!
I like to switch it up a bit from time to time
I don't like my g or y
Also, long words because I have the heel of my hand on the desk
I'll keep trying 😊
The lift off like I showed helps with that. You get to reposition the nib & your hand
Those headphones have interesting specifications, but unfortunately they don't ship to Greece...
Finally, I can use these tips to add some sophistication to my Skibidi Toilet and Among Us crossover fanfiction I'm writing with my 一分钱,一分货 rollerball!
Arm wrestling videos? Great tips though, thank you :)
There won't be any vids of my arm wrestling showing up
@@DoodlebudPity😅
@@helenmcdonnell2585 don't wanna scare people with my guns 💪💪
8. Use a Sailor, not a Pilot.
You're quite the Sailor fanboy nowadays
@@Doodlebud Horrifying but true. I think they are more precise.
L. Still looking for an uppercase L.
That’s the one letter of mine that I really like.
But isn't wearing glasses you don't need gonna make your eyesight worse in the long run?
They just magnify what you see. Its no different than using binoculars to get a bitter image of something far away or using a magnifying glass or loupe for seeing finer details . You only use them for up close. If you wear them around things will be blurry as they aren't mean for that working distance.