I draw an 8 by drawing two 'o’s one on top of the other. (Let’s call it a ‘snowman 8’)
Everyone else I’ve ever met (who’s 8s I’ve looked at) draws it in one continuous crossover pattern (like the simplest type of scalectrix track. Let’s call it the scalectrix 8)
How do you draw your 8s?
Are you right, or left handed? (which one, not “yes, I am right or left handed”)
And is this the most mundane pointless poll you’ve ever seen?
I start from the top right, and make a downward left diagonal, which winds up straighter than the return path, which has an S curve to it. The line end meets up with the beginning at ninety degrees, so if I’m not exact (which is usually the case) there’s either a gap or a tiny serif.
The same thing happened to me! I’m not sure if it was kindergarten, but I do remember a teacher telling me to do it the racetrack way. Then one day my dad saw me draw an 8 and put me in my place. I’ve been making snowmen ever since.
I’m right handed, and cross my 7’s and Z’s. I started crossing my 0’s but had to stop when I took a stats course.
1 - Race track 8 (I basically make an S and then do a straight diagonal slash to connect the bottom left and top right).
2 - Right-handed
3 - Cross my 7s and Zs (good ole’ university math classes, where I used to not cross them, and messed up three problems confusing my Z with a 2 and a 7 with an L [also why lower case Ls are written in a cursive loop in my math problems]).
4 - Sometimes put a slash through my zeros. It depends (1 - slash through zeros if I’m writing a number/letter combo so I don’t mix it up with an O, 2 - slash through zeros if I’m writing out assembly code, 3 - NO slash through zeros if I’m doing math problems, because I have a hard enough time keeping my phis and thetas straight!)
I also make my 4’s with a pointy top, two separate lines. And my 5’s are two separate lines as well: bottom part first (a shape like that curlicue under a C in French, whatever it’s called), lift pen, add crossbar on top.
I cross my 7’s, Z’s, and my zeroes. (Note: I don’t slash my zeroes like a good techie; I cross them. They look like thetas.)
I also make my lower-case “a” with the top thingie. Let’s see if I can describe this: I used to start at top right, arc back down to the left, swing around to the right along the bottom and back up to my starting point, and then go straight down. A few years ago, I made a conscious decision to retrain myself to make the letter differently, to see how hard it would be. Took me a couple of months to get into the habit, but now I start at top left, move across to the right, arc down sharply, stop at the bottom right, and make a tight loop back up to the left and down and around to the lower right.
I’m trying to teach myself to make my lower-case g’s look typographic (a circle above a slightly flattened circle below the baseline, joined by a little line, with the little flair at top left optional), but I haven’t been able to work out a quick and consistent way of making the letter so the habit hasn’t stuck yet.
Me too! Drastically changed my handwriting in engineering school to make it more legible. I also cross my 7’s which drives my current boss nuts when he checks my calcs…
I make a racetrack style 8. I thought I used the draw an ‘s’ technique, since this is what I was taught (when I was younger, probably by my mother). Some experimenting showed, however, that I have corrupted the technique somewhat. Instead of making an ‘s’ and then coming back up through it, I start at the upper righy, make a downward-curving diagonal slash to the lower left, then basically make an ‘s’ in reverse to close it up. My 8s are rather distinctive because this… they look kinda like they’re in motion.
I am right-handed, by the way.
I don’t do that crossing sevens and zeros nonsense, either.