The method of practicing your signature is as follows:
The first step is to study the original work. Look at the signature carefully and pay attention to how the handwriting is written. Everyone's signature is different and if you imitate it without studying it first, you may make an obvious mistake. Pay attention to these points:
a. Look at the height and size of the arc, whether it is flying or small and delicate. Writing the arc well is the first task of forging a signature.
b. Check the structure of the strokes, whether they are clear, scrawled or crowded together.
c. Check the inclination. Is it to the left or to the right, how much is it tilted, how much is left in a row.
d. It depends on the joints of the strokes, whether there are many overlaps between the strokes, or whether there are many blank spaces.
E, observe the personality, that is, the charm of the original author! Many people don't pay attention to this and just practice blindly, but they can't write his charm! That is his own personality!
The second step is to strengthen practice. If you understand the signature analysis, then start writing. It takes a lot of practice to write like the original. To reach the point of perfection, the difficulty is beyond your imagination. Signatures are difficult to imitate, which is why we still use them to verify many legal documents. As you practice, notice the subtle differences between the original signature and your practiced signature, and make any necessary adjustments.
The third step is to write it confidently. When you start writing, you need to be confident that it will be done in one go and it won't take too long. A confident signature will look more authentic than one that clearly took a lot of time to write. Sign it quickly and don't change anything midway - you have no way out.