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The Exceptional Tale of the World's Most Beautiful Handwriting — Not From India, Russia, Ukraine or USA
Our digital world has pretty much killed the pen. Keyboards rule now. Beautiful handwriting? Almost extinct. But some people still write in ways that make you stop and stare. Takes you back, doesn't it?
School days. Teachers nagging about neat writing during exams. Parents hovering over homework. Not so long ago, this mattered. A lot.
Then 2017 happened. A regular school assignment. Nothing special. Until it was. A young student's homework somehow found its way online. Those perfectly consistent letters. Those curves. That spacing. Immaculate. The internet went wild.
Her name? Prakriti Malla. From Nepal. Not some calligraphy hotspot you might expect. Not India or France. Not Japan or Russia. Definitely not the UK, Ukraine, or America. Just Nepal. Yet her handwriting got labeled as possibly the world's nicest. Kind of surprising when you think about it.
Even now in 2025, with everyone typing and swiping, Prakriti's talent seems weirdly relevant. It's not entirely clear why we still care so much about handwriting. But we do. Her story sparked something. People rediscovered Copperplate. Spencerian script made a comeback. Old styles, new enthusiasm.
Those fancy competitions still happen. Annual Calligraphy Competition 2025. The World Youth thing. All very official. But Prakriti's natural gift feels different somehow. More authentic. Beautiful handwriting apparently refuses to die, tech revolution or not. People still get mesmerized. Some things just endure, I guess.