Graphology Oracle
Answer six questions about your handwriting - slant, pressure, size, spacing, loops, and baseline - and receive a personality p. Embeddable domain-locked widget, mobile-responsive.

Handwriting analysis - graphology - has been used since the 17th century to draw connections between the physical act of writing and the personality behind the hand. It's not lie detection; it's not a personality test in the clinical sense. It's the observation that how you form letters, how much pressure you apply, how wide your margins run, and whether your baseline drifts upward or downward all tend to cluster into patterns that repeat across your character. Write a few lines. See what the hand reveals.
How it works
You'll answer a set of questions about your handwriting - or analyze a specific sample you're holding. The questions cover letter size, slant (left, right, vertical), pressure (light, medium, heavy), baseline, spacing between words, and specific letter formations like loops on g and y, the crossing of t, the dotting of i. The oracle maps your answers to the graphological trait profiles associated with each characteristic.
Understanding your result
Large writing tends toward extroversion and presence-seeking; very small, toward concentration and introversion. A rightward slant suggests emotional expressiveness and future-orientation; leftward slant often indicates emotional reserve or a strong pull toward the past. Heavy pressure correlates with intensity and sensory engagement; light pressure with sensitivity and sometimes physical depletion. The reading doesn't combine traits into a single verdict - it gives you each dimension with the traditional interpretation, so you can read the full picture yourself.
Frequently asked questions
Is graphology a scientifically validated personality assessment?
Controlled studies on graphology's predictive validity are inconclusive to negative. We offer it as a reflective and self-exploration tool, not a clinical or psychological assessment. Some people find the process surprisingly revealing; others don't. Both responses are valid.
Does my handwriting change over time?
Yes - stress, age, emotional state, and even the surface you're writing on affect your hand. Graphological readings are most useful as a snapshot, not a fixed identity profile.
Can I analyze someone else's handwriting?
You can - but we'd note that analyzing another person's handwriting without their knowledge sits in ethically gray territory. We built this tool for self-exploration.
What if I mostly type now and my handwriting has deteriorated?
Write a few lines deliberately, not quickly, and use that. Rushed or deliberately altered handwriting doesn't give useful data.
