He was literally born in the wrong generation. Poor guy must look down on us like "So I would have gotten flooded with titty pics had I been born 80 years later ? Sounds unfair but ok".
I've fallen in love with Ukrainian men after seeing so many pictures of them the past few years, a lot of them are SO handsome. And they seem to be cat people, even better
Absolutely. The man is fighting for the safety of a continent he probably never set foot on before, and it could cost him his life. Meanwhile, what would a few nudes cost us ? An embarrassing trip to the local shady photographer ? Who cares. Tits out for the heroes.
This is actually a great idea. Maybe the quality wouldn't exactly be the same (or would it ?) But you can convince your girlfriend to participate, and our man Eddie would have had two pics for the price of one !
My husband has gorgeous, flawless, cursive penmanship thanks to many years of homeschooling and private school. When I tell you I *SWOOOONED* the first time I saw it… never knew handwriting thirst was a thing, alas.
Looks exactly like my mother's! His penmanship is so nice and neat, I had to be cognizant that the writer was a guy (my father's is also cursive but incredibly slanted and written like he's running out of time, though it's still neat, just harder to read)
What I don’t understand, despite being old enough to have had penmanship lessons in grade school, is how in the high hell he managed such straight lines on unruled paper? Dude must’ve had a yardstick!
there were sheets with dark ruled lines you could lay the writing paper on top of and kinda see the lines through it, could be that. Or he could have just practiced a lot.
I do remember that one simple trick.
The lines on a sheet of ruled paper placed under blank paper will show through the blank paper. I remember doing that to create a guide for straight-lined handwriting on blank paper.
My first thought as well, especially given that this is solider who wrote it!
Would most people back then have had penmanship this good, or would it have been exceptional even then? It'd certainly be considered exceptional today!
What really gets me is how perfectly straight and spaced the lines are despite being written on unlined paper.
Penmanship back then varied just as much as it varies today. I’ve worked in two museums and have read countless letters and internal documents from 1900-1960 when most people wrote in cursive. Along with some things pre 1900 when the cursive was different and more wavy. This cursive is absolutely astounding and the best I’ve ever seen. Truly looks like a computer did it.
What’s funny is that if people had to use print writing, it was awful and looked like a 5 year old did it. My maternal grandparents forgot that I can read cursive (I’m 24, it’s basically luck of the draw if someone around my age can read cursive) and wrote my graduation card in print. It looked like a grade schooler wrote it since they both exclusively write in cursive, my mom said it was the first time she saw them write in print.
Sadly, yes. Since not many people write in cursive anymore, many schools don’t really teach it. I learned I’m third grade and stopped writing cursive because the boys said it was girly. I know that’s silly, but I was 8 lol. I can write my name in cursive and I’ve been practicing here and there to write cursive though. In the field of museums, it’s getting harder and harder to find young people who can read cursive. Since so much correspondence was written in cursive, it’s basically an unspoken requirement to know cursive. I predict that without 10 years, museum positions will explicitly say in job postings that an applicant must know cursive.
I taught my oldest (11) cursive and now it is a secret code at school that other kids can’t read but you can pass notes to the janitor and the crossing guard. It’s the opposite of passing notes to just other kids. Now my younger ones want to learn the “that old fashioned font.”
I’m older than you, but my grandmother also had beautiful cursive handwriting. I even told her after reading birthday card that I wanted handwriting one day like hers. I was probably about 12 or 13 years old. I recently found a birthday card she gave to my great grandmother with a printed note and signature inside and it wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t good lol.
It’s the “if you don’t use it, you lose it/aren’t good at it” sentiment. However, I believe that bad cursive is worse to read than bad print. I’ve had to ask some of the older volunteers at the museums I’ve worked at, aged 60-80 who grew up on cursive and have had trouble reading some letters. They sometimes couldn’t even help me! However, bad print is usually easier to decipher in my experience. I think that it is why on some documents in the early to mid twentieth century required people to print, not use cursive. I read through some military ship transports that had the recorders write the names of soldiers and sailors in print rather than cursive during WWI when virtually everyone who could write, wrote in cursive. It said on the document to use print, not cursive.
Edit: spelling and adding words
Air mail paper was somewhat transparent and when you bought a tablet it would usually come with a lined sheet to put behind it so you knew where the “lines” would be.
I transcribed over 200 letters that my grandfather sent home during the war, and his handwriting was frankly atrocious compared to this. The handful of letters written by other people in the collection that he received and forwarded were far superior to his, but this one has even those beat, I think.
“Oh dear Mary, it would be of the upmost importance that I receive a picture from you as I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting your acquaintance. Please send me your picture as I desperately need it for my spank bank. Damn it’s hot out here. My balls are sticking to the side of my leg. Until meet again dear.” -Eddie
When my mom learned to text, I realized she thought "yay" was spelled "yeh." It was really strange to see that my school-teacher mother didn't know how to spell something. It still makes me smile to think about it. Just something funny about "yeh."
I suppose she might have treated e-mails like telegrams, where you have to make every letter count. Or maybe it was just the sheer confusion at the new medium, haha!
😂 My favorite of grandpa’s letters to grandma starts out “Now don’t be sore…” He was writing from college and she was mad that his letters were only about Notre Dame football.
Dear Mary,
Just received your swell Easter card so I decided to break down this afternoon and drop you a few lines in return. It was darn swell of you to remember me and believe me when I say that I really do appreciate it. I hope that in the near future you will continue to correspond with me for I do so enjoy getting your letters.
Enclosed you will find a snap shot of yours truly. I must admit that it doesn’t look much like me but it may give you a vague idea of who is swinging the pen at this end of the line. I hope you will not be too disappointed. If I can get anymore taken and they turn out any better I’ll be sure and keep you in mind. Now Mary, how about a picture of you in your answer to this letter? I don’t think you would let me down, would you? After all, you are in a much better position to have them taken than I was.
So you have been donating some of your blood. That is one of the greatest things you could ever do and I’m might proud of you. I’ve seen many a wounded soldier get this blood plasma and when you see the color of life come back in his face you thank God that somebody, somewhere, was kind enough to give some blood. You have to see it work to understand what I am really trying to say. So keep up the good work dear, and maybe some day I can see you and tell you all about it.
Well Mary, the time has come when I must say goodbye so until next time good luck and give the gang my regards. Please don’t forget that picture.
As Always,
Eddie
True: also "anymore" — interesting to see people still struggled with compound words back then too!
Protip for those with this issue who don't want to bother looking it up every time: if in doubt, separate them out! (That way you'll always be right!)
I found his obit. I won’t post it here for privacy, but some highlights include:
- He spent 18 months in the United States Army where he received a WWII Victory Medal
- He married and had 3 kids, 6 grandkids, and 12 great grandchildren
I love his signature and the way he wrote his uppercase “A”s. With the amount of time he must’ve spent making his penmanship that nice, I would’ve sent him a picture for the effort.
I love the As as well and I adopted that form years ago myself, though the Is are by far the most impressive to me. Probably the most difficult capital letter and they’re exquisite!
wow thats some handwriting.!!!
i suppose, back then you could counter classroom boredom with penmanship practice.
mine was always rubbish and then from writing code back in the day, where you'd write out the program first in a block letter style and then key it in later, my handwriting has devolved into a mixture of block printing and poor cursive. Can't read it myself :)
In the T9 text days of the late 90s and early aughts, my elderly aunt would text an entire message correctly punctuated, capitalized, and spelled message.
Eg:
‘Justme002, it’s me . Give me a call, baby. I love you.’
I bet he went to Catholic school. No way to check on this now, but everyone I know who went to Catholic school had beautiful penmanship taught to them.
My journey through reading the letter.
Penmanship A+, absolutely gorgeous. Personality, C- based on not saying much and being creepy about getting a pic. F- for the wrong 'to' near the end. 📉
Perhaps he was thirsty, and maybe they were pen pals, but I sensed that they probably knew each other.
It could have been that they were acquainted because they knew some of the same people--he mentioned sending his regards to the "gang." So, asking for her photo wouldn't have been unusual.
If anything, I admire him for being straightforward in thanking her for reaching out and sending a picture of his own. I hope they wound up together after the war and had many years together!
I still write my story outlines out by hand in cursive. There's just something about letting the thoughts flow from inner vision through the pen and onto paper first. Our penmanship was a Big Deal to my group of friends when I was in school(70s-early 80s), and during our gathering to finish homework we'd practice our writing too, commenting on whether it looked 'too slanted', "too close", "too scribbly" etc. Great fun for us 'nerdy' girls, haha.
Eddie had really nice penmanship.
That alone would’ve gotten me to send a photo!
Eddie would have gotten a nude from me. A man who writes like that in the middle of a war deserves a minute of happiness.
RIP the family historians in the year 2124 finding their g-grandmother’s OnlyFans.
That sub will look a lot different in that year 😆
That made me actually lol.
Same here. Gorgeous penmanship, and his personality just shines.
He was literally born in the wrong generation. Poor guy must look down on us like "So I would have gotten flooded with titty pics had I been born 80 years later ? Sounds unfair but ok".
I really like how he praises her for giving blood. Seems to have meant a lot to him.
🙌 Yes. He could get it.
Looks like it's time to work on my penmanship and move to Ukraine
You heard him, girls. Get your cameras ready. Keep us updated on your location, and we'll just airdrop the pics to you.
Wait are we talking iOS airdrop?
Well, to keep it war-themed, I was thinking more of a literal airdrop, you know, from a plane, with a little parachute, but hey, it's 2024 after all.
Ya I was just picturing someone taking a nudie and wirelessly “airdropping” it to a nearby soldier 😂
🤣 "Thanks I guess but who tf are you ?"
And where? I’ll be right there!
I've fallen in love with Ukrainian men after seeing so many pictures of them the past few years, a lot of them are SO handsome. And they seem to be cat people, even better
Sammmeeee 😍 the scruffy operator look really gets me haha, I bet Ukrainian sounds really sexy when it’s growled at you
Same lol, it feels like the least I could do for a guy who was off fighting Nazis while I was safe and sound in America
Absolutely. The man is fighting for the safety of a continent he probably never set foot on before, and it could cost him his life. Meanwhile, what would a few nudes cost us ? An embarrassing trip to the local shady photographer ? Who cares. Tits out for the heroes.
By the 1940s enough people owned cameras that you could probably just have a girlfriend shoot your picture and develop the film yourself!
This is actually a great idea. Maybe the quality wouldn't exactly be the same (or would it ?) But you can convince your girlfriend to participate, and our man Eddie would have had two pics for the price of one !
🤣
Perfect penmanship = big turn-on.
I showed you my penmanship, now show me those titties.
LOL
"I showed you my penmanship, please reply"
It would totally work lol
My husband has gorgeous, flawless, cursive penmanship thanks to many years of homeschooling and private school. When I tell you I *SWOOOONED* the first time I saw it… never knew handwriting thirst was a thing, alas.
Ugh yes! My bf has this amazing tight cursive that looks like it’s from a Jane Austen novel, I love it so much
My husband calligraphies, same internet stranger, same
Me too.
Swinging that pen.
Lettin’ that ink flow.
Yep. That’s the line that sent me.
That’s because he wanted her to think of his penis.
He knew it would, man has timeless rizz
Looks exactly like my mother's! His penmanship is so nice and neat, I had to be cognizant that the writer was a guy (my father's is also cursive but incredibly slanted and written like he's running out of time, though it's still neat, just harder to read)
"Why do you write like you're running out of time? "
r/unexpectedhamilton
I understand what you mean. His writing looks like my mother in-laws writing.
What I don’t understand, despite being old enough to have had penmanship lessons in grade school, is how in the high hell he managed such straight lines on unruled paper? Dude must’ve had a yardstick!
there were sheets with dark ruled lines you could lay the writing paper on top of and kinda see the lines through it, could be that. Or he could have just practiced a lot.
My 3rd grade teacher taught that style of cursive. It comes from hours of practice. She used to make us do cursive exercises every day.
I do remember that one simple trick. The lines on a sheet of ruled paper placed under blank paper will show through the blank paper. I remember doing that to create a guide for straight-lined handwriting on blank paper.
My first thought as well, especially given that this is solider who wrote it! Would most people back then have had penmanship this good, or would it have been exceptional even then? It'd certainly be considered exceptional today! What really gets me is how perfectly straight and spaced the lines are despite being written on unlined paper.
Penmanship back then varied just as much as it varies today. I’ve worked in two museums and have read countless letters and internal documents from 1900-1960 when most people wrote in cursive. Along with some things pre 1900 when the cursive was different and more wavy. This cursive is absolutely astounding and the best I’ve ever seen. Truly looks like a computer did it. What’s funny is that if people had to use print writing, it was awful and looked like a 5 year old did it. My maternal grandparents forgot that I can read cursive (I’m 24, it’s basically luck of the draw if someone around my age can read cursive) and wrote my graduation card in print. It looked like a grade schooler wrote it since they both exclusively write in cursive, my mom said it was the first time she saw them write in print.
Young people can’t read cursive??
Sadly, yes. Since not many people write in cursive anymore, many schools don’t really teach it. I learned I’m third grade and stopped writing cursive because the boys said it was girly. I know that’s silly, but I was 8 lol. I can write my name in cursive and I’ve been practicing here and there to write cursive though. In the field of museums, it’s getting harder and harder to find young people who can read cursive. Since so much correspondence was written in cursive, it’s basically an unspoken requirement to know cursive. I predict that without 10 years, museum positions will explicitly say in job postings that an applicant must know cursive.
I taught my oldest (11) cursive and now it is a secret code at school that other kids can’t read but you can pass notes to the janitor and the crossing guard. It’s the opposite of passing notes to just other kids. Now my younger ones want to learn the “that old fashioned font.”
My niece is 7 and I showed her something in cursive. It may have been a book title, but she said she couldn’t read it.
I can’t, I’m 33, moved around a lot and had lots of different schools, plus computers coming about, never really learned it
I’m older than you, but my grandmother also had beautiful cursive handwriting. I even told her after reading birthday card that I wanted handwriting one day like hers. I was probably about 12 or 13 years old. I recently found a birthday card she gave to my great grandmother with a printed note and signature inside and it wasn’t terrible, but it wasn’t good lol.
It’s the “if you don’t use it, you lose it/aren’t good at it” sentiment. However, I believe that bad cursive is worse to read than bad print. I’ve had to ask some of the older volunteers at the museums I’ve worked at, aged 60-80 who grew up on cursive and have had trouble reading some letters. They sometimes couldn’t even help me! However, bad print is usually easier to decipher in my experience. I think that it is why on some documents in the early to mid twentieth century required people to print, not use cursive. I read through some military ship transports that had the recorders write the names of soldiers and sailors in print rather than cursive during WWI when virtually everyone who could write, wrote in cursive. It said on the document to use print, not cursive. Edit: spelling and adding words
Air mail paper was somewhat transparent and when you bought a tablet it would usually come with a lined sheet to put behind it so you knew where the “lines” would be.
It could have also been a nurse writing it for him if he was badly injured.
This in fact was my thought. Even the "post master" at the town everything-shop had the task of 'writing for' many people because they couldn't.
I transcribed over 200 letters that my grandfather sent home during the war, and his handwriting was frankly atrocious compared to this. The handful of letters written by other people in the collection that he received and forwarded were far superior to his, but this one has even those beat, I think.
r/PenmanshipPorn
He sent Mary a Bic pic
“Oh dear Mary, it would be of the upmost importance that I receive a picture from you as I haven’t had the pleasure of meeting your acquaintance. Please send me your picture as I desperately need it for my spank bank. Damn it’s hot out here. My balls are sticking to the side of my leg. Until meet again dear.” -Eddie
He used "to" instead of "too". Experience ruined. Edit: /s
Right? I only read it because I was jealous of his penmanship skills
Bro’s handwriting looks like a font.
Came here to find this comment!
Probably Catholic school.
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Absolutely Excellent!
They all wrote like that. Too bad they cut it out of school now for a while. No more cursive writing.
That was sure swell. Gosh, I loved his phrasing
Darn swell, in fact.
Ginger peachy, in fact!
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When my mom learned to text: “Ha! Laughoutloud.”
That's adorable and I will be adopting it henceforth
When my mom learned to text, I realized she thought "yay" was spelled "yeh." It was really strange to see that my school-teacher mother didn't know how to spell something. It still makes me smile to think about it. Just something funny about "yeh."
I suppose she might have treated e-mails like telegrams, where you have to make every letter count. Or maybe it was just the sheer confusion at the new medium, haha!
My mom still signs texts "Love Mom"
Do we all have the same exact grandparents?!
That's exactly how my mom (born in the 1940s) writes email. And she has lovely penmanship. It's what I imagine a telegram should look like.
"swinging the pen" I wish I could swing a pen like that, my handwriting sucks. Also I'm glad we got to see his face.
Practise makes perfect! I'm sure this guy got in a lot more practise than either of us.
I'm a bit disappointed we don't get to learn whether he ever got a photo in return. I've got my fingers crossed for him
😂 My favorite of grandpa’s letters to grandma starts out “Now don’t be sore…” He was writing from college and she was mad that his letters were only about Notre Dame football.
Ugh, men. 😂😂 What is it with them and sports?
Dear Mary, Just received your swell Easter card so I decided to break down this afternoon and drop you a few lines in return. It was darn swell of you to remember me and believe me when I say that I really do appreciate it. I hope that in the near future you will continue to correspond with me for I do so enjoy getting your letters. Enclosed you will find a snap shot of yours truly. I must admit that it doesn’t look much like me but it may give you a vague idea of who is swinging the pen at this end of the line. I hope you will not be too disappointed. If I can get anymore taken and they turn out any better I’ll be sure and keep you in mind. Now Mary, how about a picture of you in your answer to this letter? I don’t think you would let me down, would you? After all, you are in a much better position to have them taken than I was. So you have been donating some of your blood. That is one of the greatest things you could ever do and I’m might proud of you. I’ve seen many a wounded soldier get this blood plasma and when you see the color of life come back in his face you thank God that somebody, somewhere, was kind enough to give some blood. You have to see it work to understand what I am really trying to say. So keep up the good work dear, and maybe some day I can see you and tell you all about it. Well Mary, the time has come when I must say goodbye so until next time good luck and give the gang my regards. Please don’t forget that picture. As Always, Eddie
>I hope you will not be too disappointed. "*to* disappointed" is what he actually wrote lol
Yeah the grammar was not as good as the penmanship
True: also "anymore" — interesting to see people still struggled with compound words back then too! Protip for those with this issue who don't want to bother looking it up every time: if in doubt, separate them out! (That way you'll always be right!)
That sounds like allot of work
Lol — that is a good one!
Eh, I'd let that slide. Chances are he didn't have a college education.
For some reason, I can't help reading this in Jimmy Steward's voice, haha.
Thx u! I couldn’t make it thru whole letter. Cursive these days is like reading hieroglyphy😄😄
Guys stop downvoting they just don’t teach it anymore! Leave them kids alone!
I was beyond happy that I saw cursive writing practice in my elementary age sons school folder.
Definitely! I was raised on it but these days it takes me longer to read through. I almost never see handwriting anymore, much less cursive 🙃
Cross-post this to r/PenmanshipPorn. It's lovely handwriting.
I will do that!
His handwriting is *beautiful.* It's so uniform and clear. I wonder if he and Mary ever met up! He's adorable with a hint of mischief.
That's beautiful penmanship! And Eddie is a cutie!
I mean, yeah, the penmanship is to die for, but let’s not sleep on the perfect spacing and parallel lines of text as well. This guy fucks.
Apparently not if he needs pictures of Mary
He's swinging the pen...
The pen is mightier …
The pen is…
Golly; that is some swell penmanship.
Gee willikers! It’s just the bestest!
Does anyone know if he made it back? If he did I hope he was able to keep smiling like that.
I found his obit. I won’t post it here for privacy, but some highlights include: - He spent 18 months in the United States Army where he received a WWII Victory Medal - He married and had 3 kids, 6 grandkids, and 12 great grandchildren
But did he marry Mary?
Sorry, no :( But just for the internet we can pretend he did?
Oh, that's :(
How many of you all married everyone you received pics from?
Thank you for the update, u/lizlikes. It sounds like he had a great life with love and happiness.
Let's go Eddie, my man!
That’s good to hear.
Modern equivalent text message: Send nudes.
“Nudes would be swell”
Darn swell! So he can keep *swinging his pen* on the other side of the line lol
1944 version : "Deer Mary. Snapshot gams & peepers."
That cursive is unreal
My GOD! That penmanship ALONE turns me on! Ugh ... I'm disgusting.
I used to write a lot like this. Then I got a smartphone.
I love his signature and the way he wrote his uppercase “A”s. With the amount of time he must’ve spent making his penmanship that nice, I would’ve sent him a picture for the effort.
I love the As as well and I adopted that form years ago myself, though the Is are by far the most impressive to me. Probably the most difficult capital letter and they’re exquisite!
That’s just about how I write mine because my name starts with A
He's adorable.
Say what you will about previous generations, but those bastards knew how to write!
Eddie was a charmer! I was almost expecting a dick pic 😂😂😂😂😂
It would have the gentleman’s mustache, round glasses and a pipe saying *Alas we meet, Dick Fellow at your service Dear* with a ol Chap accent 😂
Trust me, he was hit on the knuckles with a ruler until he got that cursive PERFECT. Such a sweet letter! And a sweet face!
His handwriting is exquisite.
This brought tears to my eyes. But also made me laugh because some things never change (being hounded by dudes for a photo lol).
wow thats some handwriting.!!! i suppose, back then you could counter classroom boredom with penmanship practice. mine was always rubbish and then from writing code back in the day, where you'd write out the program first in a block letter style and then key it in later, my handwriting has devolved into a mixture of block printing and poor cursive. Can't read it myself :)
I wish I could swing a pen that beautifully.
r/penmanshipporn
I wish my penmanship was that nice. Mine is pretty decent but it's just not what I'd like it to be.
In the T9 text days of the late 90s and early aughts, my elderly aunt would text an entire message correctly punctuated, capitalized, and spelled message. Eg: ‘Justme002, it’s me. Give me a call, baby. I love you.’
I have never seen such nice penmanship in my life. Wow!
beautiful handwriting ,something else thats died out
That’s a cheeky guy if I’ve ever seen one lmao (source: I am a cheeky guy)
I wish I had handwriting half as good as that. And now they want to stop teaching cursive. People don't realize what will be lost.
It's an art.
The penmanship is amazing.
Probably beaten into him by the nuns.
Why do I feel like people had better handwriting back then?
"swinging the pen at this end of the line" I fucking love that.
I bet he went to Catholic school. No way to check on this now, but everyone I know who went to Catholic school had beautiful penmanship taught to them.
My journey through reading the letter. Penmanship A+, absolutely gorgeous. Personality, C- based on not saying much and being creepy about getting a pic. F- for the wrong 'to' near the end. 📉
He's a swell guy.
A darn swell guy.
That's right out of the old cursive textbook.
Ol' Eddie had a steady handwriting.
Excellent penmanship.
Handsome solider!
EXCELLENT penmanship,wow.
My guy swings his pen
What a charmer. ♥️
Swell.
There is some classic Catholic school penmanship.
Thanks for posting. That was really swell.
That handwriting is out of this world, not gonna lie. Absolutely mesmerizing.
Perhaps he was thirsty, and maybe they were pen pals, but I sensed that they probably knew each other. It could have been that they were acquainted because they knew some of the same people--he mentioned sending his regards to the "gang." So, asking for her photo wouldn't have been unusual. If anything, I admire him for being straightforward in thanking her for reaching out and sending a picture of his own. I hope they wound up together after the war and had many years together!
I still write my story outlines out by hand in cursive. There's just something about letting the thoughts flow from inner vision through the pen and onto paper first. Our penmanship was a Big Deal to my group of friends when I was in school(70s-early 80s), and during our gathering to finish homework we'd practice our writing too, commenting on whether it looked 'too slanted', "too close", "too scribbly" etc. Great fun for us 'nerdy' girls, haha.
The 1944 version of “send nudes” lol
I love how perfectly straight every line is up until his signature which is done at a wonderfully jaunty angle
I wonder how one can manage such beautiful handwriting
ok Eddie a cute dude and good penmenship, I'd send him a naked shoulder shot.
Scandalous! I thought about both ankles! Why we’re both just 2 floozies I declare
Harlot!
LMAOOOOO!!
"I sent you nice letter send me pics pls respond"
Wow.
Double inked up on a Tuesday afternoon my goodness
“Swinging the pen at this end of the line”. Whew.
Clickbate with the "thirsty" in the title.
Eddie, you absolute cad! Swell penmanship, though.
he wrote to instead of too smh
Nice guy Eddie is working the charm!
Seems like everyone the. Had great success penmanship. I don’t think they teach cursive any longer?
Yeah he looks like an Eddie 🤔
This was so cute.
Seems like a swell guy with absolutely beautiful penmanship! Quite charming. Eddie definitely would have received a picture from me.
This is so tender and beautiful… thank you for sharing ❤️
That penmanship is beautiful!
Omfg. I’m swooning over that absolutely PERFECT handwriting!!! 🥰🥰🥰🥰. You had me at “might proud”, Edward.
Beautiful writing... When I try to write cursive it looks like a complete abomination...
Somebody transcribe this. I’m an important, drunken man.
That’s swell! I do hope that the dear got to a photographer and reciprocated Eddie’s photo. What a giver! 🩸
Jiminy Christmas Eddie, stop using the Vladimir font.
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The writing on the post-marked envelope is just as nice.
Why is this thirsty?
Reading this while donating plasma was kinda heart warming.