This is actually a thing. When learning calligraphy, it was one of the exercises we did. If you have good enough control of your hand and pen, then all strokes should be the same length, slanted the same way, and separated by the same spacing. When you manage this apparent “unreadable” thing, it means you nailed it!
The example below comes from this site (not mine)
Keming is a bitch.
/s
Well played
Actually it says mmmiinu
Do they not dot their i’s in calligraphy?
Also nice the calligraphy used in Germany until 1941, the Sütterlinschrift
But one of the best is arabic calligraphy (I think that I can even read it ¬¬)
New metal band font dropped.
eschew obfuscation
mrnmrnm
Isn’t it clear?
No. :)
It’s a pretty obsolete hobby, as we have computers and printers that can do the exact same thing in a fraction of the time. I know people do it as an art form, which is fine I guess, though you’re not gonna sell prints, get published, or end up in a museum no matter how good you are at it.
You do hobbies for fun, not making money, that’s a job.
Yes, also painters are obsolete, because AI permits even Cletus to be an artist
Hobbies don’t become obsolete dummy
But obsolete jobs do become hobbies.
The money in calligraphy is usually made on wedding invitations, diplomas, “fine fining” menus, and corporate award certificates