{"title":"How to Write in Cursive - 7 Tips for Neat Handwriting","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/calligraphy/how-to-write-in-cursive","category":{"slug":"calligraphy","name":"Calligraphy"},"creator":{"name":"JetPens","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVbn813ctsoChuTT4LuLqrA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTI0w2CQ99Q"},"tldr":"Learn cursive in 7 steps. Tilt your paper, pick a smooth pen, master letters before connecting them, keep your size and slant consistent. Self-taught friendly.","totalDurationSeconds":554,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Gel pen or fine-liner with fine/medium tip","Grid or lined practice paper","Cursive alphabet reference"],"materials":["Practice worksheets (printable or grid notebook)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Find a Style Guide","text":"Before you write a single letter, find a cursive style you actually want to copy. Print a free practice worksheet, use grid paper, or download a cursive alphabet reference - JetPens hosts free downloadable worksheets on their blog.The guideline matters more than the style. Without a reference, your slant drifts and your letter heights wander."},{"number":2,"title":"Tilt Your Paper","text":"Slide your paper at about a 30-45 degree angle to the edge of your desk. Right-handed writers tilt the top to the left; left-handers tilt to the right.The tilt is more comfortable for your wrist and forearm, and naturally introduces the slant that makes cursive look balanced. Small mistakes also become less visible at an angle."},{"number":3,"title":"Pick a Smooth Pen","text":"Use a gel pen or a fine liner with a fine or medium point. They glide across the paper without much pressure.Avoid ballpoint pens (you press too hard and your hand cramps), broad markers (lines are too thick to read at small sizes), and pencils (the lead wears unevenly into a wedge tip and your line width changes mid-word)."},{"number":4,"title":"Master Individual Letters","text":"Don't try to write whole words yet. Work through the alphabet one letter at a time, paying attention to where each letter starts and ends.The tail of one letter has to blend into the start of the next, so knowing the entry and exit points is what makes connection feel natural later."},{"number":5,"title":"Practice Common Letter Pairs","text":"Before tackling whole words, practice common letter pairings: or, an, in, ing, ed, the. These pairs show up in almost every word, and the connection between letters is what cursive is really about.Pay extra attention to awkward connections - 'be' or 'ne' where the loop joins differently. Practice capitals connected to lowercase too."},{"number":6,"title":"Write Clear Letter Shapes","text":"Slow down. Letters with open tops (a, o, g) look like u or y when you rush, which makes your handwriting harder to read.Skip excessive loops. The decorative loops on f, p, and y look elegant in samples but clutter the letters when you write at speed. Closed shapes and short loops read better."},{"number":7,"title":"Keep Size and Slant Consistent","text":"Lowercase o and e should be the same height. Capital C and L should match each other. The whole word should slant at the same angle - one straight letter and one slanted one in the same word looks messy.Don't write too large or too small. Find a comfortable size and stick with it. Tiny variations are fine; consistent ones across the page is what makes cursive look polished."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:30:44.058Z","published":"2026-05-07T23:08:43.098Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}