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A capital W simply combines the strokes of the V, but they're slightly more compressed.
So if we start here, one, two, three, four, come up with a pretty nice looking W. However,
with some years of practicing enables me to do that. So it might not work quite so easily.
Some points to consider. I'm going to stop just when the left tip of my pen hits the
baseline. I'm going to keep my pen angled, consistent, and I'm going to go right over
that stroke so I have a nice, pointed bottom of the W. I'm going to set the pen exactly
where I started the second stroke for the third stroke, so you can see I'm setting the
pen right there and I'm making a stroke and stopping again at the baseline. And I'm going
to inject a little curve into the stroke which allows me to connect here. So ideally, you're
going to have a W that's on points, not flat at the bottom. The keys to the W are that
we have two strokes that are parallel. See that. And then we have two strokes that kind
of echo each other. This is being constructed backwards. That's not going to be as pretty.
But that's the idea. We want to keep the interval between the strokes even, we want to keep
the slant even, and we want to keep the pattern of straight, curve, straight, curve even.
So that's a lot to keep in mind. And so allow yourself some extra practicing time for the
W. There you have it.