You're the best my fiend. At least at the Torah Script. I've never seen anyone teach it in a way that actually is accurate to what I see in books or photoes but never in action, it makes so much more sense now. I love the teaching in this video also, I will remember that one. One question I have If you don't mind answering, hopefully I can explain this... I can't tell what kind of pen that is, I hear they are usually cut from bird feather or some kind... So if I were to cut a feather and do the split down the center, it would basically make it so the pen will make some kind of nib with a circular angle on it. For example, you cut it in haf and that's a half circle, cut it as less than half and it comes closer to being a flat nib but it's never actualy flat always circular to some degree. Usually people cut their nibs so the convex side of the circular angle wold be facing to your right.... right? but when you start the letter, the concave circular angle is facing left first, and then by the end it seems to be facing right. , in other words the little spikes on the ends of the letters basically switch directions it looks like, but i don't see any wrist changes. are you doing that by pressing down harder on the nib so the nib points themselves bend and switch angles? Thats kind of what it looks like but your pen is so black i can't tell.
@FatY0shi
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As a Jewish Israel I can comfortably say that they didnt teach us the meaning of the letters just how to write them 💀 (Also It's pronounced tsadiK,with a "k" sound in the end,no hate tho :)
@muddio.
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גם אני מישראל אין לי שמץ על מה הוא מדבר
@FatY0shi
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@@muddio. כן
@theresashukrani6985
22 күн бұрын
It's only pronounced with a k (kuf) in modern Hebrew. But earlier it was just Tsadi
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