If Your Elba Looks Like An L, & Your L Looks Like An I

In our texting age, it seems odd to receive a personally written letter or note anymore, beyond the scribbled signature of the greeting card. I was taught cursive handwriting, but sometime in my teens (mainly through the influence of an older friend) I decided my handwriting would have more flair is I started printing everything, giving it pizzazz. I started playing around with fountain pens and nibs and inks and educating myself on rag content in paper in terms of how it would absorb the ink, trying to avoid anything too slickly surfaced, or not wanting the pen to bleed through the page.
I half considered doing the practice exercises shown in Power Penmanship, just to make sure I was following the right stokes and that everything have proportion, hit the proper baseline and achieve "...an attractive balanced effect." The cursive "Q" can do you in. Uppercase, it can be mistake for the number "2" and Lowercase, it could pass itself off as a "g" if you aren't careful:

I started rooting around in my desk and I found a family of fountain pens:


This is a vintage ball point pen. Upright, you see a pinup girl in a bathing suit. You flip the pen, and the liquid bathing suit drops, leaving a nude figure. There was a recent episode of Extras on HBO where Ricky Gervais' agent has a pen like this, and he's sitting in his office playing around with it and having a wank. Later, he is in a meeting with Robert DeNiro, and DeNiro wants the pen.
Our signatures change over time. Mine certainly has. I was studying Napoleon's signatures since he had a life of highs and lows and partied hard in a short span of time, and it was quite interesting to see how things quickly changed for him over the years, just by studying his handwriting:

Nappy B: Counsel For LIFE! (1803)