Backtrack-Free Cursive

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Backtrack-free cursiveBacktrack-free cursive<br>✑2026-07-12penmanship

The crime<br>The redemption

I love writing in cursive,<br>shaping each word in one long stroke.<br>If you grew up learning the Latin alphabet,<br>you likely don’t realize how much joy it sucks out of cursive writing.<br>I noticed only because I learned the Cyrillic alphabet first.<br>I think and write primarily in English,<br>yet Russian feels more enjoyable to write.

The crime

I narrowed the problem to backtracking—the need to add strokes<br>to the letters I’ve partially written.<br>English wants me to dot my i’s and cross my t’s.<br>It has a lot of them,<br>and they like to cluster in a single word.<br>Instead of thinking about what I want to write next,<br>I have to maintain a mental queue of pending strokes.

Backtracking is rare in Russian.<br>Only й (short i)<br>and э (pronounced like e in end)<br>require two strokes.<br>There is also ё (pronounced yo, like in New York),<br>but its umlaut is optional.<br>So much of Russian literature is written without ё<br>that native speakers infer it unconsciously.

The word destination requires four backtracks (two t’s and two i’s) when written in English.<br>Its Russian translation назначение needs none.

To quantify my discomfort,<br>I analyzed Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment in Russian and English<br>and computed how much backtracking I would have to do<br>if I were to write it in cursive.<br>The English version needs backtracking for 51% of words<br>with 0.68 backtracks per word on average.<br>In Russian, only 6.4% of words need backtracks,<br>with 0.066 backtracks per word on average.

One way to remove backtracking is to lift the pen immediately<br>instead of waiting until the end of the word,<br>as if doing italic calligraphy.<br>Pen lifts alleviate the mental queue problem<br>and give a chance to readjust the palm,<br>but they break the writing flow.

Dots and crosses are even more irritating on digital notebooks<br>because the undo feature works on the stroke level.<br>Often, I want to remove the last word I’ve written.<br>If each word required only one stroke to write,<br>I could do it in a single tap.<br>But since every other word requires multiple strokes,<br>I resort to the eraser tool,<br>which is slower and more distracting.

The redemption

I couldn’t find a cursive script that would address my annoyances,<br>so I designed one.<br>It’s based on SmithHand,<br>with occasional borrowings from the Russian script I learned at school.<br>SmithHand renders most lowercase letters in one stroke,<br>except x, t, i, and j.

x is the easiest letter to fix.<br>Instead of using two diagonal strokes,<br>I draw two mirrored c’s,<br>as my Russian penmanship teacher would suggest.

The fix for t is also straightforward.<br>Instead of crossing the vertical line in a separate stroke,<br>I add an auxiliary line that moves the pen up and left<br>and then crosses the stem.<br>It’s the same motion you’d use to draw digit 4,<br>but mirrored both horizontally and vertically.

This variant of t often appears on logos.<br>I counted three instances just walking around Zürich main station.<br>For example, logos of Stocker bakery,<br>Leonardo ice cream parlor,<br>and the Hotelplan group<br>use it.<br>If it reads well on Swiss logos,<br>it’s good enough for my scribbles.

Single-stroke letter t often appears on logos.

If you’re feeling fancy,<br>you can make a loop on the upstroke,<br>giving the letter a little bow.<br>I prefer this variation in the th and te ligatures<br>because it pairs well with its neighbors.

Word theater written in a single stroke.

The tt ligature requires planning:<br>draw two vertical stems first,<br>then add a horizontal stroke crossing them both.

Word pretty written in a single stroke.

i and j gave me a hard time.<br>I tried skipping their dots entirely,<br>but the result was subpar.<br>I tried writing the dot before the stem,<br>trading a backtrack for a pen lift,<br>but I couldn’t get used to it.<br>It also broke the flow,<br>unless the word started with a dotted letter (as in in or just).<br>An acceptable solution must connect the dot and the stem in a legible way.

The breakthrough came from my prior experiments with dot shapes.<br>I write with an extra-fine nib,<br>so dots can disappear in a dense grid packed with letters.<br>I considered using little circles instead.<br>The change didn’t seem worth the trouble on its own,<br>but the pen lift constraint gave the idea a new appeal:<br>dots become invisible when connected to a stem,<br>but circles remain distinctive.

The design that worked fuses the circle and the stem.<br>To write an i without lifting a pen,<br>I draw a tight loop above the midline<br>that flows into a stem on the downstroke.

The placement and the alignment of the circle are crucial.<br>If the circle is below the midline,<br>the letter looks like a Greek ε.<br>If the circle doesn’t align with the stem,<br>the letter looks like an r.

The circle above the letter i<br>must be above the midline<br>and align with the stem;<br>otherwise, the letter is easy to confuse with<br>ε or r.

Word jitter is perfect for practicing the script<br>because it contains i, j,<br>and a challenging tte ligature.

Word jitter written in a single...

word stroke russian letter stem write

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