![]() ![]() Your upstroke goes up as normal then you take your pen off the paper and move it horizontally right for a little bit then up and around in one smooth motion. I also just learned recently that I have been taught that I was doing my “e’s” and “l’s” wrong. The “u” takes 1 upstroke and 2 downstrokes, while the “y” uses two complex strokes. ![]() Here the “u” and “y” have been deconstructed into the separate strokes it takes for each letter. Let’s take “m” for example, there is a lightly pressured hairline for the upstroke, and for the final stroke there 3 steps: light, pressured down stroke then light upstroke. There are some slightly different strokes required by different letters. A lowercase ‘i’ is made up of a an upstroke and a downstroke Most letters are made up of these two strokes, which you will practice with your free practice sheets. There are two main motions to learn, the upstroke: a light stroke using just the tip (number 1 in the picture below) and the downstroke: a slightly pressured stroke (number 2 below) that lessens as you get closer to the baseline.
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