{"title":"How to Write in Calligraphy - 7 Step Beginner Tutorial","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/calligraphy/how-to-write-in-calligraphy","category":{"slug":"calligraphy","name":"Calligraphy"},"creator":{"name":"Torryn Marie","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCflzyQ0hIX8R5-FDUTLzQ0w","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wBlPJqUCMws"},"tldr":"Learn calligraphy in 7 steps. Master six basic strokes, the alphabet on guidelines, bounce lettering, and how to simulate calligraphy with a fine liner.","totalDurationSeconds":618,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["4B soft pencil","Ruler","Brush pen (Tombow Fudenosuke)","Fine liner (Uni Pin 0.2 or similar)","Smooth-paper sketchbook"],"materials":["Lined or grid practice paper"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Gather Your Supplies","text":"You need five things before you start: a soft pencil for warming up (4B is ideal), a ruler for drawing guidelines, a brush pen, a fine liner, and smooth paper. Torryn uses a Tombow Fudenosuke brush pen and a Uni Pin 0.2 fine liner in this tutorial.Smooth paper matters. Textured or toothy paper shreds the bristles of a new brush pen within a few practice sessions. A sketchbook with smooth cartridge paper or a brush-pen-friendly pad like Rhodia keeps your pen tip sharp."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Drill the Six Basic Strokes","text":"Every letter of the calligraphy alphabet is built from six basic strokes. Drill them in order: upstroke (light pressure, thin line going up at a slight forward angle), downstroke (heavy pressure, thick line coming straight down), overturn (light up, curve over, heavy down - looks like an upside-down U), and underturn (heavy down, curve under, light up - looks like a regular U).Then the last two: compound curve (light-heavy-light, like a flattened W) and the oval (start on the upper right, heavy down the left side, light back up the right). The whole technique is in one sentence - light going up, heavy going down. Repeat each stroke ten or fifteen times in a row until your hand feels warm."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Rule Guidelines and Write the Alphabet","text":"Rule four parallel guidelines across your page, equally spaced. The middle space is the x-height - it holds the body of every lowercase letter. The top space holds tall strokes (b, d, f, h, k, l, t). The bottom space holds descenders (g, j, p, q, y).Hold your brush pen at a 45-degree angle to the page. The angle gives you more control over the pressure transition and stops you getting bumpy edges on your downstrokes. Now write through the alphabet a to z. Apply the light-up, heavy-down rule on every letter, even when the strokes feel small or quick."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Add Flair with a Decorative Alphabet","text":"Once the basic alphabet feels familiar, walk through it again and add decorative flourishes. Loop the entry stroke on the b and the d. Rotate the curve on the e. Curl the exit tail on the y, p, and g. The capital alphabet gets the most flourish room - crossbar swashes, looped descenders, dropped tails.There's no single right answer here. Pick the embellishments that match your taste and use them consistently. Curly and round, sharp and angular, retro flourishes - just commit to one style across the alphabet and your work looks intentional instead of inconsistent."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Link Letters into Words","text":"Now combine letters into a short phrase. Pick something with letters you enjoy drawing - a few s, b, and e shapes if you have favorites. Link the exit stroke of one letter into the entry stroke of the next, keeping the same slant and x-height across the word.The light-up, heavy-down rule still applies on every stroke, even when one letter chains into the next. The connecting strokes between letters are all upstrokes, so they should all be thin."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Try Bounce Lettering","text":"Bounce lettering is the modern look you see on Pinterest quotes and Instagram posters. Instead of every letter sitting on the same straight baseline, move each letter up or down a little. The baseline becomes a soft wave.Same letter shapes, same pressure rule - the only change is where each letter starts vertically. A bouncy 'love to bounce' reads as relaxed and hand-drawn. The straight-baseline version reads as mechanical. For cards and posters, bouncy almost always wins."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Simulate Calligraphy with a Fine Liner","text":"If you don't own a brush pen yet, you can still get the calligraphy look with a regular fine liner. Write your word in cursive first using the same letter formations. Then go back and thicken every downstroke - draw a second parallel line right next to the existing one and fill the gap with the fine liner.The result reads as real brush calligraphy even though you only used a single-width pen. It takes longer than the brush pen (a few minutes per word vs a few seconds), but the look is identical. This is the method to use when you're on a trip, in a meeting, or want to add lettering to a notebook that doesn't have a brush pen at hand."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:29:04.895Z","published":"2026-05-15T15:11:03.091Z","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."}