It was not Thom Jefferson's name that was large. It was John Hancock's signature.
Thomas Jefferson was asked to draft (write) the declaration of independance. He added in statements such as all men are created equal that at the time created a large amount of contreversy. He also was one of the signers of the final draft of the declaration of independance that is currently in the national archives.
John Hancock didn't write the Declaration of Independence. Thomas Jefferson did. Hancock was the first to sign it and he did so large enough so King George wouldn't have to use his glasses to read it.
John Hancock was the first to sign. He intentionally signed the document in large letters 'so the king won't have to put on his glasses to read my signature'.
I'm going to assume that you meant "Who were two signers of the Declaration of Independence?" and answer that, rather than your actual wording, which seems to be asking about a duet about financial liberation from one's parents/guardians. John Hancock, quite famously, signed his name very large. Thomas Jefferson, who actually wrote the Declaration, also signed it.
The Declaration of Independence was exactly as it sounds, and the Constitution was crafted, in large part, around trying to solve the problems of government that the Declaration complained of.
Thomas Jefferson
John Hancock was one of the authors of the Declaration of Independence. His signature appears very large because he was very proud.
John Hancock
John Hancock was the first to sign the Declaration of Independence, and he said that he signed it large enough for King George to read without his glasses.
"Legible even without spectacles", President of Congress John Hancock's iconic, large, flamboyant signature is without a doubt the most famous of The Declaration's signatories. However, future US presidents John Adams and Thomas Jefferson also signed that now-famous document. Josiah Bartlett, William Whipple, and Matthew Thornton (all from New Hampshire), also signed.
John Hancock's signature is the largest on the Declaration of Independence.
maintaining a large standing army