I do it by kind of making a line, then a loop and a another line going down.
Then take the pencil or pen or whatever off and use the crossbar to join it to the next letter.
A cursive F or any cursive letter is difficult to show on the computer!
this is how you do it:
In cursive, the letter "f" typically starts with a curved line upwards, followed by a horizontal line that connects to the next letter.
D,f,g,p,s,t,v
There is a website in related links that will show you a picture of it.
To spell "offspring" in cursive, you would start with the letter "o" and connect it to "f", "f", "s", "p", "r", "i", "n", and "g". Remember to loop the letters that require it, such as "f" and "g".
Follow the example on this printable sheet.http://www.crayola.com/free-coloring-pages/print/writing-cursive-f-coloring-page/The cursive lower case "f" is formed of two vertical loops connected at the center, on or just above the base line...with each loop only half as wide as it is long (or even thinner). The uppercase cursive F is a stylized printed F, with the top curved, the center line crossing like the lowercase f, and a curved tail to the left. Some people simply loop the tail at the bottom of the vertical stroke, back up across the vertical to form the center line, and continue that to the right to make the next letter.
A cursive Q typically starts with a loop to the left, goes down the center, and then curves to the right at the bottom. The overall shape resembles a combination of a lowercase cursive "o" with a tail that extends to the right.
The line of the f is on the writing line and the tail of the f flicks out slightly. There's a picture to show it below!!
you do the same thing as an l then you put an k on it
You make an counterclockwise circle and then make a line going right to join to the next letter.
There is an image at one related link below, and additional information at the other. *The cursive capital F is a multi-stroke letter that has been mostly supplanted by a modified form that truncates the upper bar and curves downward instead, so that the upper bar does not extend to the right past the descender. This is mainly due to its use in signatures, although the modified form may be mistaken for a capital T.