Endorser
This is how all checks are endorsed. While looking at the face of the check (the side with the written on it), the "left-handed end" is the end on your left. Then, turn the check over (to its back). Many times there are either multiple lines or a box (which takes up approximately 1/5th of the check's total size. You must sign within that space.
Hi: Left is fine. If you are dominantly comfortable being left-handed in sign language, then you can sign with your left dominant hand. Though even some people, who are dominantly left-handed in writing, are right-handed in signing.Whichever right- or left-handed you are, remember that you must be consistent with it. If you are right-handed, use your right hand as dominant. If left-handed, use your left hand as dominant. It is not interchangeable. If you are ambidextrous, you should choose one as your dominant hand and stay consistent with it.
Princeton is right handed because his peace sign is wretten on his left hand
endorse
I think she is because I saw her sign autographs with her left hand. And I don't think she'd use the total opposite hand to sign autographs. YES I'M LEFT HANDED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
To sign the back of a check is to endorse it.
Signing a check on the back on the left-hand end is a way to endorse it. This endorsement gives authorization for the bank to process the check and deposit or cash it. It should include the signature of the payee as it appears on the front of the check.
Yes, he is left handed, watch the hand he paints& writes with. You can see him using his left hand to sign autographs in a video of him at a signing. Go look.
He is right-handed. See him sign autographs: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwJ8W6Obz6I
If you are the maker of the check - that is, the person who is writing the check to pay someone else - you should sign on the front of the check and NOT on the back. The back of the check is for the payee's endorsement. The front of the check has a signature line for the maker to sign.
If it is made payable to you, yes. If you are the remitter (purchaser - person paying with the check), no.