This is the most complex one I’ve done so far, and I almost ran out of material (single straightened coathanger), so ~8 letters max. Coathanger is surprisingly difficult to bend into such intricate shapes. It took me around 2½ hours to do with two different types of pliers plus hand bending.
I literally freehanded this though, no predrawn pattern or anything, just following as close as I can to my own freehand cursive writing. I’m thinking about making a bit of a side job out of it, like $5 a letter…
What you folks think?
Edit: I made a point to weight balance it at the tip of the T for hanging on the wall or wherever.
Edit 2: Criticize me as necessary, my cursive is still slightly rusty…


I learned well over 30 years ago, but after looking through a few sets this site matches the lettering I was taught.
Mind you, I don’t think many people will recognize that Q for what it is anymore, my name includes a capital Q and I always write it in block and start the cursive from the squiggle. (I was taught the Q as it is in that practice set though)
That practice sheet shows the confusion pretty well too, a U and W are identical except the swoop on the W that looks exactly like a R after a U.
True, although you’d start the t from the edge of the vertical line of the w rather than the ground line. I actually couldn’t see the confusion until you pointed this out
I’ve got messy writing, I was taught to drop the R at a slant and come back with loop before starting the next letter.
It’s also wire, so some allowances for material ductileness. Context makes what it should be obvious,
Just like Cowtown could be confused as courtown, but ones more likely than the other. Cowtney is just poking fun though.
I think that’s the basic practice set I learned from as well, yeah Q is fucking weird, looks like a fancy 2…
Thanks for sharing that link, I just added that link to my original post. 👍
It really is becoming a lost art, let’s try to not let that happen…
Fwiw I know a lot of my personal cursive quirks I have picked up from online script fonts. You could try looking through sites like 1001fonts, filtering by script font, and seeing if you notice any details that make letters unique that also seem doable with wire.
All I’m really looking for is details like how to better distinguish letters, such as the R as many have mentioned, and the T, which finally someone mentioned!
The lowercase R is difficult to get the distinguishing curl and curve on.
The lowercase T is like the most difficult, as however I fold it, I can’t exactly come back over to cross it later, so the cross has to come along with the fold…