Does anyone actually write 'a' like that on the left?
>>10006126
Never, you'd have to an unironic psychopath to do that shit
>>10006126
I do.
>>10006126
i used to for a while
yes but only because I'm used to the greek letter
>>10006126
Me, but I αm a Hellene:^)
>>10006126
I did in like second grade when I took an interest in calligraphy and kept trying to write in different fonts like a computer.
I did this, because I liked to pretend that I was a computer.
I would write out a sentence twice in different fonts on different sheets of paper, hi-light one of them, and then switch the sheets around so it was as if i had just switched the font in Microsoft word.
For me
>Writing in cursive the left-most a is a lot easier to write at the beginning of words.
>However the right-most a is easier in the middle of words.
>Because I begin writing at the top-left part of the word and loops are not so easy to do.
>>10006126
Yep. Just how I was taught in preschool, I guess, never thought about it really. Is the one on the right supposed to be better for some reason?
A whole thread on a serif
>>10006375
>α
that's an alpha, not an a
>>10006126
i do but im switching back to the simple a for writing notes in class. any other writing i will keep the correct a tho. it's better and look at all the a's in this post... makes u think
I unironically always write my Q as a capital because I never learned in school how to make a lowercase
>>10008052
That's not a serif
>>10007226
Congrats, you have autism.
>>10006142
I guess I'm a psychopath.
When I write fast, certain letters become very hard to read, so I changed my a, r and g, for example, such that, even if it slows me down a little and looks tremendously ugly when written fast, it still stands out and remains legible.