History of Handwriting Analysis (Graphology)
12 Handwriting Characteristics
1. Line Quality- Do the letters flow or are they deliberately written?
2. Spacing of Words and Letters- What is the average space between words and letters?
3. Ratio of Height, Width, and Size of Letters- Are these consistent throughout document?
4. Lifting of the Writing Instrument- Is the instrument lifted to form a new letter/word, or does it stay on the page?
5. Connecting of Strokes- Are the capital and lower case letters conected?
6. Stroke From Beginning to End- Where does the individual letter begin and end?
7. Usual Letter Formation- Are the letters written in unique ways/ formats?
8. Pressure- What is the ratio of pressure to upward and downward strokes?
9. Slant- Do the letters slant to the left, right, or not at all?
10. Baseline Habits- Is the writing on, below, or above the line?
11. Fancy Writing Habits- Are there noticable curls or loops?
12. Placement of Diacritics- Where does the writer cross the t's or dot the i's?
Famous Forgery Case
Hitler's authentic signature |
Forged signature |
In 1983, German news magazine Stern published excerpts from the “diaries” of Adolf Hitler. The authenticity of the documents was debated greatly; claims were made that the handwriting did not match Hitler’s and the historical events did not match up. The publishers of Stern initially declared the entries valid, but were forced to reassess them due to massive debates on the subject. Upon inspection, the flourish used in the second part of the signature did not align with the authentic, the spirals were too large, and the diacratic on the first letter was not tilted the same way. Researchers found that the entries were forged as well as the letter used to compare them with. (Konrad Kujau had claimed that Hitler wrote him, granting him permission to publish the diary.) Konrad Kujau was tried, found guilty, and imprisoned.
Handwriting Analysis Template
To simulate forgeries, we wrote a sentence in both cursive and print. Our classmates would then try to copy it freehand and tracing. We used the twelve characteristics to tell how the forgeries differed. It turns out that the tracing was more accurate than the freehand, so it is my opinion that tracing is the better way to go.
1. The letters flowed in both
3. The traced were consistent, but the freehand had a few larger letters
4. The freehand and traced were both connected in the right areas
5. Some are connected, some aren’t
6. This was mainly accurate in both
7. The freehand ‘d’ in ‘dog’ for the print is not formed the same way, and the traced ‘t’ in ‘the’ for the print is different as well
8. The freehand is much lighter than the traced, but the traced is closer to the original pressure
9. None of the letters slanted
10. The freehand was slightly crooked, as was the original, but the traced declined steeply
11. The freehand loops were too big, but the traced were accurate
12. The diacritics were all accurate aside from the traced ‘T’ in ‘The’ for cursive; the stem touches the horizontal stroke, and the original doesn’t and the ‘j’ in ‘jumps’ for the freehanded print; the dot was a little too high and off center
Check Forgery Activity