How To Do The Graffiti Letter F

The graffiti letter F should be demonstrated as fun. This is how you make that letter graffiti style. Enlarge

How To Do The Graffiti Letter F

The graffiti letter F should be demonstrated as fun. This is how you make that letter graffiti style.

Hi, this is Julian from Graffiti Kings, London. Today, we're going to do letter F. Right, so the letter F, it is.

Letter F by default is a line with two short lines coming off it. You could do a block like that, long old-school big block letters with just have a very cool yet again it's kind of like in between the out, not really kind of declaring itself, not really a flamboyant letter. But then, when you get the kind of curved style, you have like if you're doing the E but you set back at number 3, so you almost have a top bow coming down in, so rather than doing the F like that, you do the F.

So, it comes but then it drops out. So, you got the top bow, comes out, and then you got this. This has a more rounded, more kind of just a small fun looking, a little bit fun looking.

The straight one seems more formal to me. So, I like it, and then we can either have it so it has a little almost center drop down on this side, so you give it like a C kind of flow. Again, it has an italic style, has more curves, more leaning rather than just your straight line.

So, that means I'll kind of demonstrate what I'm talking about. Take this one right here up and then it will curl and it will flick on there, but I like to break up the better cool line with this number 3 type interruption in the middle. And then you, again, just making some of the lines wrong rather than having them in a straight away to a straight horizontal, just make it like a chisel tip marker.

You're cutting the edge off in diagonals, just to not make it just straightforward. So, as this is kind of the basis for the F, some people might “I don't know, whatever letter could it be.” Let's just hope it reads straightforward.

Yet again, whatever works for whatever letters are joined in there would help it along the course. But I prefer, you know, just to have a little bit of movement, a little bit of breaking up, just so that it kind of takes the straightness out of the letter. And that's the same again, you don't need to make the drop too long and just cut out another chisel diagonal edge.

So basically, that's what I would do. I might now even come back on the outside and just give it just another little, you know, just to take your eyes away, kind of rather than just going to stop and then that cross a bit a little and it will sear up a little kind of cool classical finish to it. But yeah, that's the F.

I hope you like it. .