What makes a font good for handwriting practice?
Not every font that looks like handwriting is useful for practising it. The ones that work well share a small set of properties.
A good practice font makes it obvious where each stroke starts and where it ends. Learners are not just copying shapes; they are learning movements. Ambiguous entry points teach the shape but not the motion.
Similar letters should be built from similar strokes. The a, d, g, o, and q should share the same underlying oval. When a font is internally consistent, practising one letter directly reinforces the next.
A font for a five-year-old should be different from one for an adult. Young learners need simple, unambiguous forms. Adult learners can handle and often benefit from slightly more characterful letterforms.
Some fonts look beautiful at display size and fall apart at practice-sheet scale. A good practice font holds up at any size, with clear counters and consistent stroke weight.