underused: an illustration of a collared trogon,  a type of tropical bird (Default)
underused ([personal profile] underused) wrote in [community profile] wotd2017-07-14 01:24 pm

griffonage

From the French griffoner, 'to scribble or scrawl,' griffonage is a pretty word for terrible handwriting.

How much writing do you still do "by hand"? Print or cursive?


handwriting sample: Edna St Vincent Millay

misbegotten: Anne Hathaway and Steve Carell communicate via tin cans (Misc Communication)

[personal profile] misbegotten 2017-07-14 06:14 pm (UTC)(link)
I do cards and postcards in prinsive. Cursint? (Oh, that sounds naughty.) Mostly the wotd is very applicable to me.
darkmagess: (Default)

[personal profile] darkmagess 2017-07-14 06:41 pm (UTC)(link)
that is an excellent word!
merikuru: (Default)

[personal profile] merikuru 2017-07-14 07:35 pm (UTC)(link)
My writing is sort of a mixture of both. Very print-y, but with a lot of cursive-ish loops and connections and often rather unreadable (in my opinion.)

I don't think I'd go so far as to call it griffonage though.
amidthestars: (Default)

[personal profile] amidthestars 2017-07-16 02:31 pm (UTC)(link)
There were about 3 years where I didn't have a computer or a phone or any other type-y machine, and so I wrote everything by hand. I found it hard, mostly because my brain always worked too fast for my hands to keep up. It often felt viscerally overwhelming, and I always felt really limited in what I was actually capable of expressing. (Does that make sense?)

I've read a lot of writers (Mary Oliver is the only one I can think of right now, but I know I've read others, too) who insist that writing by hand is the only way to properly write anything, and that typing is, I guess, unnatural and not as good for your thinking or creating, and I always think, "Really?" I don't want that to be true. Writing by hand is painful for my wild little brain.

My handwriting is more cursive than print. Printing has always felt too slow for me. I wouldn't say it's terrible (in the griffonage sense), but (as you know!) it is often criticized for being too small - which it definitely is. But it's always just been mine, you know? There was a time where I actually started to study calligraphy books to see if there was a way I could make my writing bigger but still feel like it belonged to me. I'm not sure if I was successful, but it was fun to play with (and I learned a weird amount about calligraphy in the process). I try to write larger now, but it still doesn't feel natural.