How to: Calligraphy Flourishes + Free Printable (2024)

Once I gotsome basics down,watched a few tutorials from the wonderful Pieces Calligraphy and Postman’s Knock, I became intrigued by the idea of flourishing. I’ve been dreamily staring at different artists’ work and I wondered how I could get there too – it just seemed so effortless in their videos where I felt super awkward and unsure of where these lines shouldgo!

After some playing around, I gathered some of my tips and tricks as a beginning flourisher. As a University instructor, I found that the Master Teachers I learn from have been pretty removed from these beginning stages of learning, which made it incredibly difficult for them to articulate to me how to navigate certain scenarios in the classroom. I found myself being a decent trainer of new instructors because I was closer to the learning experience. In that spirit, these are someof the things that helped me, so hopefully they help you too as a fellow learner.

BEGINNING CALLIGRAPHY FLOURISHES

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Some of my personal tips and favorite supplies as I learn calligraphy flourishes include this cork nib holder and sumi ink // http://www.prettyprintsandpaper.com

CALLIGRAPHY & HAND LETTERING SUPPLIES

There’s so many different types of lettering and mediums, soyou can practicethe lines and the flow with everything from a pencil, a gel pen, to brush pens, to pointed pen. Here are a few of my personal favorites for all of the above (Note:* Some of the above links may beaffiliate links. In plain English, this means that I may receive a small commission (at no cost to you) if you subscribe or purchase something through the links provided. You will never see me post a link to a product or service that I haven’t used myself and love! (Learn more here)

Pencils:

Pens for faux calligraphy:

Brush Pens:

Pointed Pen:

I’ve used regular printer paper but I’m LOVING using the Rhodia dot pad for practice because it is so smooth and takes ink well without bleeding.

TIPS FOR BEGINNING CALLIGRAPHY

I used a few different approaches – first, I started studying the flourishes of artists I admire. Some of my favorites include @ThePostmansKnock, @paola_koala, and @amandaarneill. I would pick some photos that I love and looked at their flourish forms – which letters did theyflourish from? What are the shapes they create? How do they connect?

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To help learn and practice calligraphy flourishes, it helps to study those of awesome artists like @AmandaArneill // http://www.prettyprintsandpaper.com

In Amanda’s photo I’m looking at how she enters into the R, the end of the R, the top of the d in Amanda, and how she’s connecting the H and the T across two different words (!). Her work is a lot of swoops with just a few loops, which delicately fills in the white spaces in between her words. Most of her flourishes are hairlines, without the thick downstrokes which keeps it light and modern.I just love Amanda’s work because she flourishes without beingoverwhelming.

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To help learn and practice calligraphy flourishes, it helps to study those of awesome artists like @thepostmansknock// http://www.prettyprintsandpaper.com

Lindsey does some amazing work – and when I look at this I have to deconstruct each flourish so I can study how the lines flow. She adds down thickness to the downstrokes with her pointed pen, which adds more visual intrigue. She is unafraid to loop over and over again and create an overall image and effect. (She also has an awesome free flourishing worksheet on her blog that you should check out)

From all of theseimages Ipulled out a few different flourish forms to create drills for myself. Ipracticed with my pointed pen, andwanted to develop some muscle memory to make flourishing easier. The more I didthe drills the more I realized there is a way each line wants to be drawn – and I have to just go with it. This sounds very un-technical but I believe it’s true! If Ifocus on feeling my pen on the paper, I can tell where the lines want to flow, so I follow.

Looking at some of the drills,you can tell if they might belongin the entry or exits on letters like y’s g’s or j’s, or if they swoop from letters like h’s t’s or the ends of words. I start off with flourishing just a few letters per word and focus on having the embellishment feelnatural. I try to imagine what the flourish will look like before I draw it which helps guide my pen.

If you’re going for the thick-thin look, flourishes are definitely an exercise in varying your pen pressure at the right times, which got hard if I went too quickly. This adds another layer of complexity – going fast enough to be natural but slow enough to be deliberate with your thicker downstrokes. This took me a few pages of drills to get down.

The part that I haven’t played with too much yet is adding additional flourishes that aren’t connected to letters. That seems like an elusive art that I haven’t studied enough yet – but I will get there, someday.

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Some of my personal tips and favorite supplies as I learn calligraphy flourishes include this cork nib holder and sumi ink // http://www.prettyprintsandpaper.com

Doing thedrills helped me get familiar with the swirls and loops – and then I started adding them to my actual lettering. This took some massaging but itis MUCH easier now than it was before! The lines started flowing much more easily and now I can add them to my lettering. (I’ll upload a video using these, I promise, I wanted to get the worksheets out!)

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Some of my personal tips and favorite supplies as I learn calligraphy flourishes include this cork nib holder and sumi ink // http://www.prettyprintsandpaper.com

Now that I’ve done enough talking, are you ready to practice your own set of drills??I created a very simple and hand-drawn printable for you to get started practicing your own flourishes!Click the photo below to download your own. (For personal use only- absolutely share,and make sure to give credit!). If you’re going for more of a traditional calligraphy style, go ahead and draw in the diagonal guidelines for the Italics (take a pencil and draw //// along the sheet and line up your downstrokes with the angle). Modern calligraphy is more straight up and down at 90 degrees (which I tend to do).

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MORE CALLIGRAPHY PRACTICE SHEETS

Want to dive in even more?

  • Check out my roundup of my favorite brush lettering practice sheets
  • Practice sheets with my cursive script and serif script
  • Follow along my Letter Archive for how to draw each letter

If you end up using them, snap a pic and share – tag me so I can see! If this was helpful, share with a friend or elsewhere – if you have other questions, share them down below!

Enjoy,

Jessica

How to: Calligraphy Flourishes + Free Printable (2024)

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