For parents, teachers, and homeschoolers, the journey of teaching a child to write is both magical and messy. You have the pencils, the erasers, and the colorful notebooks. But often, the missing link between a child’s desire to write and their actual ability to form letters is the medium they are copying from.
Young children (ages 3–6) struggle with —the body's ability to sense its location, movements, and actions. They know they want to make a "B," but their brain often forgets where to begin.
Install the font today. Type your child's name. Print it out. Hand them a pencil. Watch their eyes light up as they follow the dot from start to finish. That small circle is the beginning of a lifetime of beautiful handwriting.
Most tracing sheets just show a dotted letter. The child looks at it, sees a blur of dots, and arbitrarily picks a starting point. This leads to "reversed letters" (b/d confusion) and "bottom-up" writing (starting a circle at the bottom instead of the top), which is incredibly hard to unlearn later.