|
Post by Deb on Jun 22, 2010 17:10:27 GMT -5
WRITING This week is for writing. Post pictures of your writing please.
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Jun 22, 2010 17:10:42 GMT -5
Working on it, my "f" isn't as smooth as I would like. Never has been. The "f-l" I seemed to have some trouble with... ugh... I'll post later my drills of some of the outlines and the writing exercise (when I get a chance).
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Jun 22, 2010 17:10:46 GMT -5
First page of my "homework". Some words I practiced. Attachments:
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Jun 22, 2010 17:12:40 GMT -5
Second page. More outlines I practiced as well as the writing exercise. Attachments:
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Jun 23, 2010 12:02:47 GMT -5
|
|
tam
Gregg Shorthand Beginner
Posts: 7
|
Post by tam on Apr 21, 2015 12:50:47 GMT -5
Hi guys, this is my homework, well part of it, of Brief Form Drill for Unit 4 of the Anniversary Manual Attachments:
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Apr 21, 2015 15:59:42 GMT -5
That looks good! Thanks for sharing.
|
|
tam
Gregg Shorthand Beginner
Posts: 7
|
Post by tam on Apr 23, 2015 6:21:37 GMT -5
Hey friends, attached are my recent exercise of unit 4. And I remember you guys were talking about the best writing tools, most of you are using ball point pens. So I tried all kinds of pens and finally found my choice: flat point nib fountain pen! It's the best for steno taking. In the last pic, there is Hero 5028 Made in China of course super cheap and super smooth. With the flat point, it makes those flat dashes, like n, m, l, g, ch, j... easy and smooth. ps. I copy-pasted the online tutorial to word document and printed it out in inksaving mode just to make it vague so that I can write directly on it to train accuracy and copy the best style. It works great! Will be back with more to share! Thanks for cheering me up!
|
|
|
Post by Deb on Apr 27, 2015 17:12:18 GMT -5
Those are great notes. I still haven't tried a fountain pen. There are some cheap ones that someone mentioned, but I need to order online. One thing, the days of the week, like Friday, are mostly abbreviated. It's learned later in the manual, Unit 16. If you want you can learn them now or later. Spelling them out is perfectly fine, you can do that with any outline you're unsure of and it's correct. The abbreviations help with speed. So you decide. Here's the information if you want to abbreviate now. 
|
|