In Praise of the Fading Art of Handwriting: Three Thoughts [and a Drawing]

elephant-writer-girl_md

In the recent Fast Co.DESIGN article “10 Ways to Rescue Handwriting From the Grave,” author Philip Hensher describes his great love of handwriting—yep, the lost art requiring a writing utensil and non-digital surface—and his hope that handwriting gets its rightful place in our daily lives.

“I want everyone to maintain an intimate and unique connection with words and ink and paper and the movement of hand and arm. I would love people to lose shame in their own handwriting, and develop an interest in the varieties of writing instead–something which might lead them to do something about their handwriting, rather than regarding it with despair. I want people to write, not on special occasions, but daily. I want to maintain a variety of ways to engage with the silent word and the considered record of a sentence–typed on keyboards, thumbed on keypads, handwritten–and to enrich our relationship with language through a variety of means.” (Hensher)

Hensher’s piece reminds readers to fold in handwriting to your daily life. He’s not anti-digital writing but asks readers to remember—to also cherish—the simple craft of handwriting.

While I read the article (an excerpt from Hensher’s book The Missing Ink), a few points truly resonated with me. I’ll share three thoughts—then give you leave to go read the entire article.

1. Writing by hand every day helps us to bring down the hectic pace of our lives just a notch.

“In all sorts of areas of our life, we enhance the quality of our lives by going for the slow option, the path which takes a little bit of effort.” (Hensher)

If you peruse Etsy, the world’s largest online craft marketplace, you’ll see myriad people who chose to create works by hand. Yes, the crafters could have created art an easier way or bought a dress instead of sewing one, but they chose to create something extraordinary, something personal. Creating works by hand—whether an amazing vegetable garden a mosaic, hand-rolled ravioli, etc.—does take more time, more effort but it also requires more patience and thoughtfulness. You can’t rush pottery or a painting.

Producing those works, just like in writing a note by hand, helps us to slow down.

2. Writing helps us to be mindful. If we take some time to think about the writing surface, our writing instrument, and the movement of the writing instrument on paper, we become people who are more aware of our environment, our tasks, our lives.

“Why are you in a rush? Why don’t you have two minutes to write something down? Why is your pen dashing in that awful way over the paper? Who ever described, or thought of describing, their handwriting as executing so many w.p.m.? Why can’t you breathe, and lift, and take a moment to enjoy this small sensuous act?” (Hensher)

3. Writing by hand has value because it is a reflection of you. In other words, your handwriting is something that you’ve created. At its core, the written word, even if on a shopping list or a gift tag, is like your interpretation of symbols to reflect a thought. Don’t stress over it and make fun of it for being too small, too scribbled, too sloppy, too anything; don’t place burdens on it. Instead, value your handwriting’s unique aspects. You’ve produced artwork. Value it as such.

“Start from the good psychic point that you can always value it, because it has so much of you in it.” (Hensher)

Make handwriting part of your daily life. See those scraps of paper and scribbled thoughts as miniature works of art that express who you are. Not all of you—that’s far too much pressure for handwriting—but part of you, who you are in that moment. Whether you are feeling angry, whimsical, confused, or affectionate, your handwriting will reflect that.

In the Fast Co.DESIGN article, Hensher offers wonderful and thoughtful ideas for incorporating handwriting into your life. I highly recommend you check it out.

Cute Snack-Sized Valentine Note Cards [Printables]

I got, oh, so tired of seeing the mass-produced valentines at our local store, so I decided to draw up a few of my own. Drawing (hee) on my love of hot cocoa and marshmallows, I created a colorful PDF of eight original illustrations for my Etsy shop…

fun-kids-valentines-cards-culinary-peek

 

The valentines are just $5—just the price of a latte. And unlike lattes, which are quickly finished and no longer enjoyed, you can use the PDF several times to print out as many note cards you want!

You can also use the valentines as:

  • lunch box notes
  • gift tags for a box of chocolate (or hot cocoa!)
  • cute love notes to put on pillows, under windshield wipers, etc.

I printed out the sheet and framed it (and my literary valentines) as wall art to add more color to my studio.

Support the hand-drawn arts and get cute illustrative works at the Paper Dali Shop.

 

Three Creative Spaces to Celebrate the Doodle, Art’s Maligned Sibling

drawn while I was on the phone with a friend

Once maligned by the intelligentsia and still overly analyzed by psychologists, doodles (in the form of visual summaries and infodoodles) are storming corporations and social networks (Pinterest, Tumblr, Flickr, etc.).

Why the reawakened interest in doodles? One reason may be because the emergence of visually driven social networks has reminded us that people are visual.

As Sunni Brown, the celebrated visual thinker and strongest advocate of the Doodle Revolution, says, “Visual language—something as sophisticated as a wireframe or as simple as a doodle–is native to our brains.”

I doodle when I’m thinking. Whether I’m in a webinar for work, at a writers’ group meeting, or on the phone (speakerphone, so my hands are free), I’m scribbling away. Nothing fancy. No apps. Just paper (envelopes, sticky notes, whatever is around) and Sharpies and colored pencils.

The extent of my art lessons being a course in basic drawing at Monsignor McHugh Elementary School, I was searching for videos about visual summarizing when I found some lovely online spaces for doodlers to share their doodles, celebrate this art form, and embark on doodling projects.

Let me share my favorite three places.

Doodlers Anonymous

Doodlers Anonymous boasts 7,685 doodlers from around the world. Doodlers can learn about featured artists, participate in projects (such as Showcase Bookmark Doodles), explore the work of other doodlers via the blog, and share their own work. Joining the site is free.

The Hello Project

The Hello Project is a shockingly simple project, sponsored by Sharpie. Doodlers express “hello” on a sticky note and share it via the website. Really simple, right? But the variations on “hello” are extraordinary. Sticky notes show doodles that inspire giggles, smiles, gasps, and even an uneasy, creepy feeling. Who knew you could say “hello” in so many different ways?

The Scribble Project

The Scribble Project provides a template for doodlers to download. Doodlers then answer the questions (everyone everywhere gets the same questions) via doodles and scribbles.

Like the Hello Project, the greatest draw (no pun intended… well, maybe slightly intended) is the myriad styles of doodlers everywhere. Just seeing how the concept of doodling is expressed makes me want to download a template and draw one up myself.

Write a ‘Charming Note’ to an Author You Like (or Even Love)

 

In Carolyn See’s lively book, Making a Literary Life: Advice for Writers and Dreamers, she urges writers to share their admiration and love of other wordsmiths by breaking out the old-school stationery set and writing letters to them.

“So, I strongly suggest that in addition to your thousand words a day, you write one charming note to a novelist, an editor, a journalist, a poet, a sculptor, even an agent whose professional work or reputation you admire, five days a week for the rest of your life. Then after you write the note, you address it, put a stamp on it, and mail it out. These notes are like paper airplanes sailing around the world …”

Her guidelines are simple:

  • Write letters to the living. (In other words, I won’t be sending flowers, cards, and boxes of chocolate to Tolkien, C.S. Lewis, Flannery O’Connor, Anne Bronte, or Joseph Conrad.)
  • Write about why you admire the writer, not yourself. (A thank-you-for-being-amazing is the point, not a thank-you-for-being-amazing-please-put-in-a-good-word-to-your-agent-for-me letter.)
  • Do this five days a week for the rest of your life. (I’ll do once a week, Carolyn.)

What appeals to me about it is the random act of writery kindness. You’re setting out to let a writer know that you care, that their writing mattered to you. And you don’t expect (at least, I’m not) anything in return except knowing that you added a little dash of sparkle to another writer’s life.

“They [your letters] salute the writer (or editor or agent) in question. They say to him or her: Your work is good and admirable! You’re not laboring in a vacuum. There are people out in the world who know what you do and respect it.” (Carolyn See, Making a Literary Life: Advice for Writers and Dreamers)

I decided to make this a resolution for 2012. At first, I could only think of two names; I tend to favor the dead. Fortunately, I keep notes of books read in my Moleskine, and they helped me remember authors whose work touched me. Before long, I had a list of enough people to write two letters a week for a year.

Once I had a full list of names for my “charming notes,” I spent an afternoon meandering through Paper Source for just the right stationery and envelopes. (The stationery is plain because I’m drawing a personalized doodle for each author.)

Now, I just need to sit down and write my very first charming note. Or at least, several drafts of one until it’s just right … enough.

Have you tried writing charming notes? Do you do that regularly or are you thinking about it?