Sawyer starts with the elegant capital S and has the w-y connection that changes from a wide letter to a descender. The y drops below the baseline, giving the name depth. The er ending is common and smooth, wrapping things up cleanly after the dramatic middle.
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These letter pairs need extra attention. Here's how to connect them smoothly.
The capital S finishes near the baseline. Connect into the a with a short upstroke.
The w ends heading upward. From that peak, drop into the y's first downstroke and let the tail swing below the baseline.
The e opens into the small cursive r. Keep the r low, just a small bump to finish the name.
The wy connection is the hardest part. Practice going from the wide w into the descending y.
The y's tail should curve left below the baseline, not drop straight down.
The er ending is the easiest section. Let your hand relax into those final two letters.
Print this page for a ready-to-use practice sheet. Trace the model, then write on the blank lines.
Model
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