Free printable checklist
Calligraphy and Hand Lettering Starter Checklist
Everything you need to begin calligraphy and hand lettering, on one page. Print it, check off each step, and enjoy the journey. Made for beginners over 50.
1. Gather your supplies
- A brush pen or dip pen
- Practice paper
- An ink if using a dip pen
- A guide sheet with letter shapes
2. Your first project
Letter a loved one's name in a flowing script and frame it as a small gift.
3. Your first month, step by step
- Week 1: Get one or two brush pens (a Tombow Fudenosuke is the classic starter) and some smooth paper. Spend your sessions on the eight basic strokes only: thin upstrokes with light pressure, thick downstrokes with firm pressure. Do not try to write words yet. Ten relaxed minutes a day is plenty.
- Week 2: Print a free practice sheet and trace the lowercase alphabet, letter by letter. Notice how every letter is just the basic strokes combined. Go slowly and lift the pen between strokes. It is normal for letters to look wobbly, that is muscle memory being built.
- Week 3: Start connecting letters into short, easy words like 'hello,' 'love,' and 'thanks.' Focus on keeping the slant and the letter height consistent. Try the faux-calligraphy trick with a regular pen too, so you can letter anywhere without special supplies.
- Week 4: Write a whole short phrase or quote and letter a card or envelope for someone. Pick one thing to refine, such as even spacing or smoother downstrokes. Look back at your Week 1 page and enjoy how far you have come.
4. Mistakes to avoid
- Pressing too hard on the upstrokes. Upstrokes should be feather-light, downstrokes firm. Practice lifting almost all pressure as the pen travels up. This thin-thick contrast is the whole look of calligraphy.
- Trying to write words before mastering the basic strokes. Spend real time on the eight basic strokes first. They are the building blocks of every letter, and rushing past them is the number one reason letters look shaky.
- Writing too fast. Calligraphy is drawn, not scribbled. Slow right down and lift the pen between strokes. Speed comes naturally later, once the shapes are in your muscle memory.
- Using cheap, toothy paper that frays the pen tip. Rough paper shreds brush-pen tips and snags dip-pen nibs. Use smooth marker paper, laser printer paper, or a dedicated calligraphy pad so your tools last and your lines stay crisp.
- Holding the pen straight up like a ballpoint. Lay the pen back to about a 45-degree angle to the paper. This lets the brush or nib flex properly to give you those thick downstrokes.
- Comparing your day-one work to a pro's finished piece. Everyone's early letters wobble. Keep your first page and compare against your own progress, not against years of someone else's practice.
5. Helpful gear to get you started
- Calligraphy brush pen set
- Hand lettering workbook
- Smooth practice paper
- Tombow Fudenosuke brush pens (beginner)
- Brush lettering practice pad (smooth paper)
- Calligraphy guideline / grid paper
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Want the how-to videos and full guide? Open the complete Calligraphy and Hand Lettering guide →