"I like big butts" had me laughing 3 mins straight
@Retr0-jbd
11 ай бұрын
😂😂
@onepenshow
Жыл бұрын
📖FREE Guide - 7 Secrets That Will Instantly 10x Your Writing: onepenshow.com/secrets
@sara_x145
5 ай бұрын
no one pointing anything what he actually wrote?
@octaviooyhanarte9574
Жыл бұрын
Pro tip From a student: write small, it's kinda obvious but if your strokes are shorter you spend less time and ink on each letter and as a side effect being consistently on it makes it look more homogeneous without trying to hard I've also never got tendinitis which idk :tumbsup: I write in cursive btw Trust me Large letters are for postals writing in fountain pen, not serious work
@octaviooyhanarte9574
Жыл бұрын
It obviously depend on my haste on getting the manuscript. If I'm relaxed I will go with bigger, more spaced words, if I need to get it fast it becomes much more cramped but still readable to others
@Vendavalez
3 жыл бұрын
In the school I went to we were forced to use to write in cursive all the way to high school. The moment that I was allowed to use print, I started using that and I always felt that I was writing faster like that. I did think that it must be because I was writing with either a pencil or a ball-point pen, which made me have to put a lot more force when writing if I wanted it to be an acceptable level of dark. Long flowing motions took longer than short strokes when putting a lot of pressure. I never really tested it though. Many years later, I got into the fountain pen hobby and decided to start practicing cursive again. It was slow at first, but now I am writing much faster. I was wondering how much faster I would be writing in cursive compared to print, so I decided to put it to the test. Turns out that I still type faster in print compared to cursive. I am not fully sure why. I have been putting a lot of thought into it. It is not because I care about how it looks more for one than the other. If I'm writing fast I don't care what it looks like. I guess that something about it is more natural for me? For example, yes, I have to lift the pen and put it back down for every letter but, I guess because of the rhythm of how I think, that actually helps? Like, when I am writing in cursive I might start writing the next letter before I am ready for it and I hesitate and it slows me down. Yes, I have a lot more practice writing in print, but I remember that back then the difference in speed writing was similar to what it is now right away. I started to think that maybe my assessment was wrong and maybe there was something about writing in print that should make it faster in general that I had not thought about and yet, when I start to look into it, I come up with claims, such as the one made in this video, that cursive should be faster. It's a good thing that I write in cursive for fun and relaxation because I might have been terribly upset if, after months of practice, I was still faster writing in print lol
@jamarlucman1603
2 жыл бұрын
cursive is a big investment for speed whem writing you will not need to lift your hand up Every letter
@jamarlucman1603
2 жыл бұрын
and pens help a lot instead of pencil
@Vendavalez
2 жыл бұрын
I know a wrote a lot and when I was done I didn’t feel like editing it so it is perhaps difficult to understand some of the things that I meant. But did you read what I wrote? For the record, I switched to writing in cursive exclusively like 3 months ago. I just enjoy it more when using fountain pens. And I just tested it and I STILL write faster in print. When I write in print. No idea as to why.
@Muzikman127
27 күн бұрын
@@Vendavalez perhaps it's just as simple as 3 months isn't enough to outweigh a lifetime of practice? You probably got very good at printing efficiently from just using it as your default for years. (by the way, I actually did read your whole comment before responding :p)
@Muzikman127
27 күн бұрын
@@Vendavalez I'm curious, the comments above are 2 years old now. Did you stick with writing cursive regularly? If so, were there any further changes later on re speed? i.e. from regular practice did you find you kept on getting quicker, perhaps overtaking your print speed? (you said you did it recreationally when writing with a fountain pen for fun, is that a regular hobby you kept up with or just something you did for a while in the end?)
@letstrytogetbetterokay8516
11 ай бұрын
I do naturally write in slanting cursive. It's the ultra artistc cursive style - so it's slow to write and can be hard to read quickly... but that's my natural writting. I have trained myself to write in straight print over the past 1 year. Its not pretty, but it is good to read quickly. It also helps bring me clarity. I know cursive should in general be faster... but writting in print is faster for me.
@marctestarossa
3 жыл бұрын
But speed wise there is nothing that can beat keyboard typing. It's super fast, it's perfectly legible and it's not tiring at all, I can write for hours straight. But it also needs practice. I type about 100 words per minute and there is no way ever I can write this fast with a pen on paper, no matter how smooth the paper is. Or is there someone who can handwrite 100 words per minute?
@ojtiv
2 жыл бұрын
yeah the only reason im looking at this vid is because of school, there is literally no other reason for handwriting apart from maybe forms you have to fill out, but even then most of the time its done typed.
@lindasue8719
2 жыл бұрын
@@ojtiv wow
@sear8663
2 жыл бұрын
Writing is better for memory retention compared to typing.
@fireplant4769
3 ай бұрын
Taking notes with pen during a lecture is nice!
@marctestarossa
3 ай бұрын
@@fireplant4769 only if you really know what you‘re doing. if you‘re good at creating mind-maps and visualization it can be fantastic. but if you take long-form notes, you‘re better off typing. and the key to memory retention isn‘t writing by hand, it‘s taking your notes and lectures and compile all the information in your own words, drawing connections and understanding the context. the more the information is interconnected in your brain the better it remains up there. ♥️
@gamelygangsta9211
4 жыл бұрын
Wowww!!!!! This is really HELPFUL thanku👍🏻👍🏻☺👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
@XxShade_FrostxX
3 жыл бұрын
I need to learn to write quicker so I can better write notes. As most of my teachers only put important notes on the white bored for a short amount of time. I normally write with pencil (just a plane led pencil you normally get on your school supply list) cause I make alot of mistakes. But im pressing down quite hard and so my hand starts cramping slowing down my speed. So I starting writing in pen so im not putting as much pressure when I write which helps. I write natually small and in cursive. But NOT cursive joint. All my classmates write in print and most write quicker than me. Im falling behind alot when taking notes. But im not sure what to do to improve. I have written alot for the last 8 years of my life.
@georgegonzalez-rivas3787
2 жыл бұрын
WUT? Pencils aren't slow. Shorthand was always done with a pencil because it is fast. I think you're taking the idea that fountain pens are faster than ballpoints and making the mistake of extending that on to pencils. It's not 'wetness' it's ink deposition volume over time. And graphite is very smooth because the graphite molecular structure os based on 8 molecule hexagons that slide over each other very quickly and easily. Graphite is often used as a lubricant just because it is smooth and fast.
@onepenshow
Жыл бұрын
Yes you are absolutely correct, I since then learned about graphite as a dry lubricant. I stand corrected, thanks George.
@marctestarossa
3 жыл бұрын
I handwrite a lot since about 2 years now and I developed different styles of writing for different purposes. For example when I need to write fast and it has to be legible for everybody I write everything in capital letters. This seems slow but I have a lot of practice with this. When I need to write very fast and only legible to me then I have a super minimalist style, many letters become just single lines and if I read it 5 years later and I don't remember what it was all about there are lots of words even I can't read any more. That's why I use this for note taking to remember things now, it's like short term storage. When I write to keep, like a journal, I tend to write in a standard cursive, because it's the least tiring (I have problems with some fingers falling asleep while writing).
@brentmccune
Жыл бұрын
There is a shorthand method that is significantly easier to learn while still increasing writing speed. it is called "Speed Writing Skills Training Course" by Heather Baker.
@onepenshow
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the excellent recommendation
@fbales
4 жыл бұрын
Helpful. Thanks.
@gamemount5827
3 жыл бұрын
Pilot precise v5 is best pen for fast writing (it is the fastest rollerball, idk if there is any fountain that is faster than this)
@Oldnose63
Жыл бұрын
Sure there is: any wet writing Medium or Broad nib generally can be more fluent and using the right ink you can have nice side effects like shading or sheening. That the fun thing with fountain pens: you can play around with nibs and inks
@vaibhavpindikura3841
3 жыл бұрын
Those _eyes_ !
@imnoobye2344
3 жыл бұрын
got a problem
@ntumbachinoya9150
2 жыл бұрын
I don't write Faster at School and I'm just Slow and I'm trying hard to make a good hand writing Is bad
@renren5153
5 ай бұрын
i love you
@Kennehmccomick2012
3 жыл бұрын
Ty! Really helpful!
@Some-One4
3 жыл бұрын
I have to use pencil
@truegamer2158
2 жыл бұрын
Wow it so informative thanks 😊
@jesperkthomsen
2 жыл бұрын
Did you know? John le Carre has written all his books in longhand with fountain pens? I see comments hailing electronic typing for speed which is completely correct. You can produce a 1000 page brick of a book in a couple of weeks and, of course, edit, review eternally without filling up your wastebasket with paper. However, when you write with your hand you need another level of concentration. An example could be writing in spanish or portuguese where the gender is important. Here you need to have the sentence complete in your head before writing it. It slows you down? Of course, but it gives your brains a kind of gimnastics that you don't get typing. Maybe John le Carre is not the most productive writer of them all, but the quality of his sentences is superb.
@onepenshow
2 жыл бұрын
I completely agree. I feel different after writing longhand vs. electronic typing. Even with typewriters I experience these kind of gymnastics you're describing. Take away the option to edit on the go and your mind will have to work.
@jesperkthomsen
2 жыл бұрын
@@onepenshow As opposed to Hemingway, who said "Write drunk, edit sober" which I would expand to "Turjn off your WIFI, write drunk, edit while hanged over and depressed, send to editor sober". Anyway. he supposedly reviewed and edited eternally and consequently his sentences became short and simple. Bear in mind, he wrote on a manual typewriter thereby writing fast, but still had to discard the whole page for a simple correction. So, modern editing on at computer is heaven on earth. But still, it gives you quantity and speed. Not quality! Fountain pen or - blast it - ballpoint (🤮) does. An example. In portuguese you have "Embarcação" and "Barco" both meaing essentially "Ship". But one is masculine and the other is feminine. In a long sentence you need to chose which to use because there will be an "A" or an "O" somewhere before. In wordprocessing you don't need to worry. If you started with one and decide for the other mid sentence you just go back and correct. But with the pen you need to decide before writing the first word. This is where your brain has to start working in honest. It stimulates and enhances your brain. It makes you SMARTER to use the pen!
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