posted
Mine is absolutely horrible. It actually is illegible unless you're me. My boss thinks its the worst he's ever seen in his life.
It was never all that great but I admit I haven't written very much since high school when I started typing all the time. When I do put pen to paper, its usually short-hand notes I'm taking during a meeting or phone call.
My father's penmanship is immaculate. He takes great pride in it--he could easily be a letterer or even do calligraphy. He's also an amateur artist though. The reason I bring him up is two-fold: is his being so much better perhaps partially because of a generational gap and partially because he's an artist? How is the penmanship of some of our other artistic talents?
From: If you don't want my peaches, honey... | Registered: Sep 2003
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posted
I waffle back and forth depending on who actually has to read it. If it's for me only...nobody is figuring it out. For others, totally legible.
From: Turn around... | Registered: Jul 2003
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cleome46
or you can do the confusion 'til your head falls off
posted
I'd call mine serviceable. Nobody complains about being unable to read it, but nobody proclaims it to be beautiful, either.
I do get compliments on the sign lettering I do for the local co-op. After five years of volunteering, I can do it relatively easily, but I still wish it was better.
-------------------- Hey, Kids! My "Cranky and Kitschy" collage art is now viewable on flickr. Drop by and tell me that I sent you.
From: Vanity, OR | Registered: Dec 2008
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posted
crappy. my mom always said that I should be a doctor, based on my poor handwriting.
and its gotten worse over the years, as my hand tends to cramp more.
From: Vancouver, BC, Canada | Registered: Dec 2003
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Set
There's not a word yet, for old friends who've just met.
posted
It was bad before I got onto the computer, and I resisted for like, a decade, being a luddite.
Now it's incomprehensible. Sometimes I can't sleep because of an idea running around in my head and sit up and jot it down to 'get it out of my head.' The next morning, it's gibberish and I feel like I'm trying to translate heiratic glyphs...
Registered: Aug 2006
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posted
Well, I am not artistic. As for my penmanship. THe only thing I write in cursive is my signature. Everything else I print. I remember learning cursive in school, but After we were taught it, I went back to printing.
As for legibility, when I was studying for the bar exam, the review course said to check if your handwriting is legible. This is because there were 10 essay questions. Hard to score if they can't read your essay. To determine if your handwriting is legible, they suggested that you write down a paragraph or two of something and then giving it to someone else to see if they can read it.
-------------------- Five billion years from now the Sun will go nova and obliterate the Earth. Don't sweat the small stuff!
From: Boston | Registered: Aug 2003
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posted
Mine is incredibly neat, i'm slightly OCD when it comes to my handwriting. Although I did do an article on a few bands one night, drank to much wine while I was listening to them, and then spent nearly a week trying to figure out what I'd written... I had three pages of scribbles and straight lines.
From: Durban, South Africa & Auckland, New Zealand. | Registered: Nov 2004
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Set
There's not a word yet, for old friends who've just met.
posted
Other bizarre quirk;
As a kid and teen, I wrote so small that nobody could read my writing.
And yeah, no cursive, just for my signature, which nobody is supposed to be able to read anyway...
Registered: Aug 2006
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posted
Legible, but not pretty. Heavy and dark with little style. My parents were always pretty appalled by my penmanship and made me practice. When I was in high school, my mother complained about it to my English teacher at a parent teacher conference. The teacher showed her samples of the handwriting of the other boys in my class, which was much worse than mine. They laid off after that. My mom, dad, and sister all have beautiful penmanship.
-------------------- No regrets, Coyote.
From: Missouri | Registered: Oct 2003
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posted
If I write very slowly mine can actually be quite neat and nice. But if I apply any type of speed to it, it becomes worse than a 3 year-old's scrawl. Completely messy and illegible.
I've just sat three exams and I feel sorry for the markers who have to try and make some sense of what I've written.
Of the generations thing - my Dad's is just as bad or worse than mine but my Grandad's was completely immaculate. He could write in that beautiful, flourishy calligraphy style that you might see in some centuries old book or something.
I wish I'd paid more attention to his tips and lessons when I was younger.
From: Australia | Registered: Dec 2003
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posted
Generally neat (and used to be more so). Not if I'm taking notes as someone's speaking, though; I'm not that fast. My style is close to standard school-taught handwriting, so it amazes me when some people have difficulty understanding it.
My brother has a similar style and quality. My mother was taught a rather flourishy style, but in my lifetime, she generally uses a half-writing-half-printing. My father's writing is illegible, which is probably why he almost never uses it. He does everything in printing, and that's quite sloppy and shaky.
-------------------- Tom Strong, on nostalgia: "I suppose it's a ready substitute for genuine feeling." - Tom Strong #6, Alan Moore
From: Calgary, Alberta | Registered: May 2008
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posted
Utterly appalling at the best of times and bizarrely gets even worse depending on the colour ink I am using.
From: Dorset, England | Registered: Oct 2008
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