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Popular Methods of Forging Signature 2

The document discusses various methods for forging signatures, including tracing over the genuine signature with carbon paper or by placing documents on top of each other. It also describes characteristics that may indicate a signature is forged, such as shaky handwriting, pen lifts, and signs of retouching. Finally, it defines different types of forged signatures, including simple forgeries where the signature is copied in one's own handwriting and simulated forgeries where the signature is carefully imitated.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
81 views14 pages

Popular Methods of Forging Signature 2

The document discusses various methods for forging signatures, including tracing over the genuine signature with carbon paper or by placing documents on top of each other. It also describes characteristics that may indicate a signature is forged, such as shaky handwriting, pen lifts, and signs of retouching. Finally, it defines different types of forged signatures, including simple forgeries where the signature is copied in one's own handwriting and simulated forgeries where the signature is carefully imitated.

Uploaded by

fmroyal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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    Popular Methods of Forging Signature


      1. Freehand Method -  whereby the forger, after careful practice,
         replicates the signature by freehand. Although a difficult
         method to perfect, this often produces the most convincing results.
      2. Trace-Over Method - the sheet of paper containing the genuine
         signature is placed on top of the paper where the forgery is
         required. The signature is traced over, appearing as a faint
         indentation on the sheet of paper underneath. This indentation
         can then be used as a guide for a signature.

            Methods of Signature Tracing


            1. Carbon Outline Method - carbon paper inserted between
               original and false document.
            2. Indentation Process - original document is placed over
               false one under it, to be traced later using a pen or
               pencil.
            3. Transmitted Light Process - a light source is placed
               under a light, the original document is placed under the
               false one. The light source will illuminate both
               documents so that the writings on the original document
               will be seen and traceable on the false one.

      Characteristics That May Suggest Presence of Forgery


      1. Shaky handwriting
      2. Pen lifts             
      3. Signs of retouching
      4. Letter proportions
      5. Very close similarity between two or more signatures

      Kinds of Forgery of Signatures


      1. Simple Forgery - (spurious forgery) signing of a document in
         his own or in a modified handwriting. Easy to detect once
         standards of genuine signatures are obtained.
      2. Simulated Forgery - (freehand forgery) the copying or imitation
         of a signature.

      Indicators of Forgery 
      1. Blunt starts and stops
      2. Pen lifts and hesitations
      3. Tremor
      4. Speed and Pressure
      5. Patching
          
Slant - slope of writing in relation to the base line.

Spacing -  is a blank area devoid of content, serving to separate words,


letters, numbers, and punctuation.

Striking - (stamping) making an impression of a coin on a metal blank


by pressure using steel dies.

Superimposition - placing or laying of one document over another 


in a way that it appears as a single image. The placement of an
image or video on top of an already-existing image or video, usually
to add to the overall image effect, but also sometimes to
conceal something.
Terminal - The end of a writing stroke.

      Initial Stroke - the beginning of a writing stroke.

Tremor - deviation from uniform stroke brought about by lack of


smoothness.

      Kinds of Tremors 
      1. Genuine Tremors - caused by age, illiteracy, weakness.
      2. Tremor of Fraud

Typebar - one of the bars on a typewriter that bears type for printing.

Typewriter - is a mechanical or electro-mechanical machine for writing


in characters similar to those produced by printer's movable type
by means of keyboard-operated types striking a ribbon to transfer
ink or carbon impressions onto the paper.

      Carriage Return -  referred to a mechanism or lever on a typewriter.


      It was used after typing a line of text and caused the assembly
      holding the paper (the carriage) to return to the right so that
      the machine was ready to type again on the left-hand side of
      the paper (assuming a left-to-right language).

      Typeface - the printing surface of the type block. The most


      popular type are pica and elite.

      Pica - 10 characters per inch

      Elite - 12 characters per inch

      Types of Typewriters
   
1. Keyboard typewriter - is the simplest kind of typewriter,
         functioning from the QWERTY formation of letters and having
         a type (a metallic cast with letters molded into it) that's
         attached by a bar or rod.
   
2. Single-element typewriter - enable the user to print data in
         different languages or fonts. Instead of using a bar mold for
         the type (called a type bar), single-element typewriters use
         type wheels, type sleeves or type shuttles for molds. The
         most popular single-element was the Hammond type-shuttle
         typewriter produced in 1884.
   
3. Type-bar typewriters, as the name suggests, use type bars,
         or molds of iron shaped like bars, for their types. Type bars
         are the most common kind of typewriter and the original
         invented by Sholes, Glidden and Soule was a type-bar
         typewriter.
   
4. Index typewriters - were far less costly in the pre-modern
         era, but also less useful. An index typewriter required that
         users first input what key they would like, and then perform
         another action (usually pressing a lever) to print the letter
         to a page. Usually these didn't use type bars, but instead
         type wheels, type shuttles, type plates and even more novel
         types. Examples of the index typewriter are the American
         Visible, first manufactured in 1901, and the French Virotyp
         of 1914.
   
5. Teletype Typewriters - (Teleprinters) came on the scene in
         the mid-1950s and peaked in popularity in the 1960s. They
         were used mostly for communicating information from point
         to point, much as modern fax machines are used. Most non-IBM
         computers had teletype terminals. Teletypes were completely
         mechanical and thus required regular lubrication; they didn't
         have type bars in the strictest sense and instead used
         plastic gears to print messages.
   
6. Electric Typewriters - The most modern typewriter, still
         used today, is the electric typewriter, most notably IBM
         models such as the Selectric. The electric typewriter
         minimized the force necessary to print out a message by
         using a motor and type ball to print letters on paper.

Vignette - a small illustration or portrait photograph which fades


into its background without a definite border.

Watermark - a faint design made in some paper during manufacture that


is visible when held against the light and typically identifies
the maker.

Writing - is a medium of communication that represents language


through the inscription of signs and symbols.

      Cursive Writing - also known as script, joined-up writing,


      joint writing, running writing, or handwriting is any style of
      penmanship in which the symbols of the language are written in
      a conjoined and/or flowing manner, generally for the purpose of
      making writing faster.

      Writing Speed - Classified Into 4 Divisions


      1. Slow and Drawn
      2. Deliberate
      3. Average
      4. Rapid
Questioned Document - is any signature, handwriting, typewriting or other mark
whose source or authenticity is in dispute or doubtful.

Graphology - study of the handwriting to determine personality traits.

Simulation - an attempt to disguise one's handwriting or copy someone Else's.

The following trait are considered in handwriting analysis:

1. letter form which includes curve, connections, slants, size and angle.
2. line quality which indicated the amount of pressure used by the author.
3. Arrangement which refers to spacing, formatting and alignment.

Characteristics which indicate that a handwriting sample has been forge.

1. shaky lines
2. dark, thick starts and finish
3. numerous pen lifts

 But they may also be the result of nervousness, alcohol impairment or other
factors.
 The content of what a person writes is analyzed by handwriting expert.
Grammatical, style, punctuation and word choice are included in the analysis
of handwriting.
 The speed or how fast a person write is not considered in handwriting analysis
though speed may affect their formatting and letter and line forms.

Calligraphy - decorative handwriting or handwritten lettering. The art of producing


decorative handwriting or lettering with a pen or brush. From Greek "Kallos"-beauty
and "Graphe"-writing.

Three Stages in the Process of Handwriting Examinations


1. Analysis - the questioned and the known items are
    analyzed and broken down to directly perceptible
    characteristics.
2. Comparison - the characteristics of the questioned 
    item are then compared against the known 
    standard.
3. Evaluation - similarities and differences in the 
    compared properties are evaluated and this 
     determines which ones are valuable for a
    conclusion. This depends on the uniqueness and
    frequency of occurrence in the items.

Handwriting Exemplar - known standards - is a piece of writing that can be


examined forensically as in a handwriting comparison.

Two Types of Handwriting Exemplars


1. Request Writings - obtained from individual
    specifically for the purpose of conducting a
    handwriting comparison.
2. Collected Writings -samples the individual produced
    for some other unrelated reason generally in the 
    course of their day to day activities.
Common Questioned Documents
1. Forgery 
2. Counterfeiting
3. Mail Fraud
4. Kidnapping
5. embezzlement
6. Theft
7. Robbery
8. Sex Crime
9. Murder
10.Homicide

Historical Dating - work involving the verification of age and worth of a document or
object.

Indicators of Forgery
1. Blunt starts ans stops
2. Pen lifts and hesitations
3. Tremor
4. Speed and Pressure
5. Patching

TERMS

Alignment defect - characters that write improperly in the following respect: a


twisted letter, horizontal misalignment, vertical misalignment, or a character "off its
feet" these defects can be corrected by special adjustments to the type bar and type
block of a type bar machine. 

Allograph - a writing or signature made by one person for another or a style (block
capital, print script, or cursive form) of one of the 26 graphemes of the English
alphabet or of the ligatures or other symbols that accompany it.

Altered document - a document that contains a change either as an addition or a


deletion.

Ample letter - that which encompasses more than the standard inner space in a
given letter.Characterized by fulsomeness and expanded ovals and loops.

Archive - collection of documents and records purposely stored for a defined period
of time.

Assisted writing - the result of a guided hand, produced by the cooperation of the
two minds and two hands of two persons.

Ball point pen - a writing instrument having as its marking tip a small, freely
rotating ball bearing that rolls the ink into the paper.Many of these pens use highly
viscous, non aqueous ink but in recent years construction of some pens have been
adopted to use water-based inks. 
Baseline - the ruled or imaginary line upon which the writing rests.

Big Floyd - the FBI super computer that contains software allowing it to search
criminal records and draw conclusions from the available information in the hunt for
those responsible for an individual crime.
Bindle paper - clean paper folded  used to contain trace evidence, sometimes
included as part of the packaging for collecting trace evidence.Most of the time, white
paper is used and has the consistency of butcher paper, the paper used in deli
markets.

Bitmap - a mosaic of dots or pixels defining an image, including dot matrix


imprints.The smoothness of the image contour depends upon the fineness of
resolution and the number of dots or pixels per inch.

Blobbing - the accumulation of ink on the exterior of the point assembly of a ball-
point pen that drops intermittently to the surface being written upon.

Blunt ending - the effect produce on commencement and terminal strokes of letters,
both upper and lower case, by the application of the writing instrument to the paper
prior to the beginning of any horizontal movement.

Boat - a dish-shape figure consisting of a concave stroke and a straight line


sometimes forming the base of letters.

Body - that portion of a letter, the central part that remains when the upper and
lower projections, the terminal and initial strokes  and diacritics are omitted.

Boustrophedun - writing in which alternate lines are written in opposite directions


and even have the posture as well as the direction of reversal letters.

Bow - a vertical curve stroke as in capitals D and C.

Braille - a system of representing letter, numerals etc. by raised dots that a visually
impaired person can read by touch.

Burring - a division of a written line into two or more, more or less equal portions by
a non-linked area generally running parallel to the direction of line generation but
moving away from the radius of a curving stroke.Sometimes referred to as splitting.
Carbon copy - a copy of a typewritten document made by means of carbon paper.An
exact replica;duplicate.

Carbon ink - (India ink) one of the oldest form of writing ink commonly referred to
as India ink even though the ink was first used in China.In its simplest form carbon
ink consists of amorphous carbon shaped into a solid cake with glue.It is converted
into a liquid for writing by grinding the cake and suspending the articles in a water-
glue medium.Occasionally,a pigmented dye is added to improve the color.

Case file - a collection of documents comprising information concerning a particular


investigation.

Case records - all notes, reports, custody records, charts, analytical data, and any
correspondence generated in the laboratory pertaining to a particular case.

Character - any typed or handwritten mark, sign or insignia, abbreviation,


punctuation mark, letter, or numeral whether legible, blurred or indistinct. 

Charred document - a document that has become blackened and brittle through
burning or through exposure to excessive heat.

Class characteristics - not all characteristics encountered in document examination


are peculiar to single person or thing and one that is common to a group may be
described as a class characteristic.Traits that define a group of items collectively.
Clogged (dirty) typeface - over prolonged use, the typeface becomes filled with
lint, dirt, and ink particularly in letters with closed loops such as p and g.If these
condition is allowed to continue without cleaning, the printed impression will actually
print with the clogged areas shaded or solid black.

Cloth ribbon - a type of ribbon used in some models of typewriter.

Collected standards - a sample of writing made during the normal course of


business or social activity not necessarily related to the matter in dispute.

Conjoined letters - two letters that have been written in the common manner such
that the terminal stroke of the first is the initial stroke of the second.

Connecting stroke - an expression commonly used to refer to the fusion of the


terminal stroke of one lower case cursive letter and the initial stroke of another
having no identifiable or describable entity of its own.

Connection subtypes

 Supported - the body of the letter rests against or retraces the stem.
 Looped - the initial stroke forms a loop with the stem of the letter.
 Unsupported - the body of the letter does not follow or retrace the stem.

Contraction - a form of word abbreviation wherein one or more letters are omitted.

Cursive - a form of continuous writing in which letters are connected to one another
and designed according to some commercial system;the most common allograph of a
grapheme.
Decipher - to determine the meaning of, as hieroglyphics or illegible writing, or to
translate from cipher into ordinary characters, or to determine the meaning of
anything obscure.

Defect - any abnormality of maladjustment in a typewriter that is reflected in its


work and leads to its individualization or identification.

Diacritical mark or point - a sign added to a letter or symbol to give it a particular


phonetic value.An accent.Sometimes used to refer to the dots over the letter i and J.

Didot system - a typographic measuring system used in Europe and based on the
didot point, similar to the U.S.,English Pica system.

Digraph - a group of two successive letters  representing a single sound or a complex


sound that is not a combination of the sounds ordinarily represented by each in
another occurrence.ex. ph in digraph and ch in chin.

Diphthong - the combination of two vowels in succession, the sound of which begins
with one and ends with the other.ex. oil,boy,out.

Disguised writing - a deliberate attempt to alter handwriting in hopes of hiding


one's identity.

Disputed document - a term suggesting that there is an argument or controversy


over a document.Disputed document and Questioned document can be used
interchangeably to signify a document that is under special scrutiny.

Document - any material that contains marks, symbols, or signs either visible,
partially visible, or invisible that may ultimately convey a meaning or message to
someone.

Document examiner - an individual who scientifically studies the details and


elements of documents in order to identify their source or to discover other facts
concerning them.Documents examiners are often referred to as handwriting
identification experts.

Documentation - written notes, audio/video tapes, printed forms, sketches, or


photographs that form a detailed record of the scene, evidence recovered, and actions
taken during the search of the crime scene.
Erasure - the removal of writing, typewriting, or printing from a document.It may be
accomplished by either of two means, a chemical eradication in which the writing is
removed or bleached by chemical agents (liquid ink eradicator, abrasive erasure in
which the writing is effaced by rubbing with a rubber eraser) or scratching out with a
knife.

Exemplar - a specimen of an identified source acquired for the purpose of


comparison with an evidence sample.An example of a person's writing, a standard for
use in comparisons, a collected or a request specimen.

Facsimile - an image of printed matter that has been transmitted electronically.

Fiber-tip pen - (porous-tip pen) a modern writing instrument in which the marking
element or point consists of a porous material through which the ink can flow.

Flow-back - an increase in the density of an ink line caused by the run of excess ink
along the finish of a stroke, occurring when the pen is lifted from the paper.

Fluctuation - alternating changes of direction, positions, or conditions (ex.alternating


acceleration and deceleration of writing speed) or alternating expansion and
contraction of the writing pattern.

Fluency - freedom and other like terms, referring to a generally higher grade of line
quality that is smooth, consistent, and without any evidence or tremor or erratic
changes in direction of pen pressure.

Flying finish - the diminishing taper of a terminal stroke when the motion of the
instrument does not stop at the completion of a word.

Flying start - the growing taper of an initial stroke or the delicate initial hook that
appears where the motion of the instrument precedes actual writing.

Font - a complete set or collection of letters, figures, symbols, punctuation marks,


and special characters that are of the same design and size for a particular typeface.

Forced hand - a person's signature or writing executed while the hand was under the
physical compulsion or control of another person. 

Forgery - (free hand imitation) a legal term that involves not only a non-genuine
signature or document but also intent on the part of its "marker" to defraud.

Fountain pen - a modern nib pen containing a reservoir of ink in a specially designed
chamber or cartridge.After complete filling,the pen maybe used to write a number of
pages without refilling.

Fraudulent signature - a forged signature.It involves the writing of a name as


signature by someone other than the person without his/her permission, often with
some degree of imitation.
Freehand simulation - a fraudulent signature that is produced by copying or
imitating the style and size of genuine signature without the use of physical aids or
involving a tracing process.

Gooping - the accumulation of excessive amount of ink on the exterior of the point
assembly of a ball-point pen as a result of the rotation of the ball, usually transferred
to the paper surface immediately after the direction of rotation is substantially
changed.

Graphoanalysis - a registered trade name that identifies the system of handwriting


analysis taught by the international graphoanalysis society inc.

Graphology - the art of attempting to interpret the character of personality of an


individual from his handwriting, also called grapho-analysis.

Graphometry - a method of characterizing a handwriting by measurement of the


proportionate values of the angle and ratio of the heights and widths of letters.

Graphonomics - the study of the science and technology of handwriting and other


graphic skills (coined in 1982) or the scientific study concerned with the systematic
relationship involved in the generation and analysis of writing and drawing
movements and the resulting traces of writing and drawing instruments either on
conventional media such as paper and blackboard or on electronic equipment.

Guided-hand signature - a signature that is executed while the writer's hand or arm
is steadied in any way, also known as assisted signature.Assisted signatures are most
commonly written during a serious illness or in deathbed. 
Habit - a persistently repeated element or detail of writing that occurs when the
opportunity allows.

Hand lettering - (hand printing) any disconnected style of writing in which each
letter is written separately.

Haplography - the unintentional omission in writing or copying of one or more


adjacent and similar letters, syllables, words,or lines.

Hiatus - a gap in writing stroke of a letter formed when the instrument leaves the
paper.An opening, an interruption in the continuity of a line.

Holographic document - any document completely written and signed by one


person.
Indented writing - writing impressed into the surface of a page of paper of pressure
exerted upon the writing instrument when used on a previous page.

Inert hand - an execution of writing in which the person holding the writing
instrument exercises no motor activity whatsoever,conscious or unconscious.The
guide leads the writing instrument through the medium of the hand of the first
person.The writer may be feeble or a complete illiterate.

Infrared examination - the examination of documents employing invisible radiation


beyond the red portion of the visible spectrum.Infrared radiation can be recorded on
specially sensitized photographic emulsions or it can be converted by means of an
electronic viewing device into visible light for an on the scene study of the evidence.

Infrared luminescence - a phenomenon encountered with some dyes used in inks


and colored pencils that when illuminated with a narrow band of light in the blue-
green portion of the spectrum give off luminescence that can be detected in the far
red or near infrared range.The technique is useful in distinguishing between certain
inks and colored pencils and in detecting or deciphering erasures.

Ink eradicator - a chemical solution capable of bleaching ink.

Inorganic pigment - a natural or synthetic metal oxide, sulfide or other salt used as
a coloring agent for paints, plastics, and inks.

Insertion - the addition of writing and other material within a document such as
between lines and paragraphs or the addition of whole pages to a document.

Interlineation - the act of inserting writing or typewriting between two lines of


writing.

Iron-gallotannate ink - this ink is found in fountain pens, was used as early as the
8th century and with substantial improvement, is still in use today.

Joint or Juncture - the point or position at which two or more strokes meet within a
letter.

Kerning - the spacing of two letters closer together than customary when their
designs leave too much intercharacter white space.

Known standard - a specimen of an identified source acquired for the purpose of


comparison with an evidence sample, synonymous with exemplar.

Lateral expansion - the horizontal dimension of writing produced by the width of


letters, the space between letters and words, and the width of margins.

Lateral writing - writing characterized by wide letters and spacing.

Left-handed curve - a stroke that is made in a counterclockwise direction.

Left-handed or wrong-handed writing - any writing executed with the opposite


hand from that normally used.Sometimes referred to as "writing with the awkward
hand" it is an attempt to disguise handwriting.

Legibility - the ease with which a reader recognizes individual letter and character
shapes.

Letter - any drawn, written, printed, or typed character, lower case or uppercase that
can be recognized as an allograph of the alphabetof any language.

Lexical - pertaining or related to the words of a language.

Ligature - a group of connected characters treated typographically as a single


character, sometimes a stroke or bar connecting two letters.

Line quality - appearance of a written stroke determined by a combination of factors


such as speed, shading, pen position, and skill, ranges from smooth and legible to
tremulous and awkward

Machine defect - any defect in typewriting resulting from the malfunctioning of the
machine rather than the typebar or type element.

Manual typewriter - a machine whose operation depends solely upon the


mechanical action set in motion by striking a letter or character key.

Manuscript writing - a disconnected form of script or semi-script writing.This type


of writing is taught to young children in elementary schools as the first step in
learning how to write. 
Mirror writing - writing that runs in the opposite direction to the normal pattern,
starts on the right side of the page and proceeds from right to left with reversed order
in spelling and turning of the letter images.

Moire - the impression with which the habits of the writer are executed on repeated
occasions or the divergence of one execution from another in an element of an
individual's writing that occurs invariably  in the graph but may also occur in the
choice of the allograph or normal or usual deviations found between repeated
specimens of any individual's handwriting or in the product of any typewriter or other
record making machine.

Movement - an important element in handwriting.It embraces all the factors related


to the motion of the writing instrument, skills, speed, freedom, hesitation,
rhythm, emphasis, tremor, and the like.The manner in which the writing instrument i
moved.

Natural writing - any specimen of writing executed normally without an attempt to


control or alter its identifying habits and its usual quality of execution.It is the typical
writing of an individual.

Nonaqueous ink - ink in which the pigment or dye is carried in any vehicle other
than water.Inks of this class are found in ball-point pens, typewriter ribbons, and
stamp pads and are widely used in the printing industry.

Nodule - a small, rounded mass or lump of ink caused by an excessive deposit, the
result of gooping in some ball-point pens.

Nonce word - a word coined to fit a special situation.

Notes - the documentation of procedures, standard, controls and instruments used,


observation made, results of test performed, charts, graphs, photos, and other
documents generated that are used to support the examiner's conclusion.

Oblique lighting examination - an examination with the illumination so controlled


that it grazes or strikes the surface of the document from one side at a very low
angle, also referred to as side light examination.

Orthography - the principles by which the alphabet is set into correspondence with
the speech sounds.The art of spelling.

Patching - retouching or going back over a defective portion of a writing


stroke.Careful patching is a common defect in forgeries.

Pen - any writing instrument used to apply ink to the paper.

Pen lift - an interruption in a stroke caused by removing the writing instrument from
the paper.

Pen position - the relationship between the pen point and the paper.Specifically, the
angle between the nib of the pen and the line of writing and between the pen point
and the paper surface are the elements of pen position.

Pencil - a writing instrument in which the marking position consists of a compressed


stick of graphite or colored marking substance usually  mixed with clays and waxes.

Pencil grade - a qualitative description of the hardness or softness of a pencil.

Pencil lead - not really lead but a mixture of various types of waxes, clays, graphite,
and carbon.

Permanent defect - any identifying characteristic of a typewriter that can not be


corrected by simply cleaning the typeface or replacing the ribbon.

Pica - a unit of measure of printer's type approximately1/6 in. or 12 points, typically


used for vertical measurement.Also a term used to denote conventional monotone
typewriter typeface that has a fixed character width of 10 to the inch.

Point - the basic typographic unit of measurement of fonts, line spacing, rules, and
borders, there are 12 points to a pica and 72 points to the inch, typically used for
vertical dimensions.

Pressure - the amount of force exerted on the point of the writing instrument,
technically termed point load.

Proportional-spacing typewriter - a modern form of typewriting resembling


printing in hat letters, numerals, and symbols do not occupy the same horizontal
space as they do with a conventional typewriter.

Questioned document - any document about which some issue has been raised or
that is under scrutiny. 

Reference collection - collections of typewriting, check-writer specimens, inks,


pens, pencils, paper, etc., compiled and organized by the document examiner as
standards of the products.

Request standards - writing samples written at the request of another person.

Restoration - any processed in which erased writing is developed orbrought out


again on the document itself.

Retouching - going back over a written line to correct a defect or improve its
appearance, synonymous with patching.

Retracing - any stroke that goes back over another writing stroke.In natural
handwriting there may be many instances in which the pen doubles back over the
same course but some retracing in fraudulent signatures represents a reworking of a
letter form or stroke.

Rhythm - the element of the writing movement marked by regular or periodic


recurrences.It maybe classed as smooth, intermittent, or jerky in its quality.

Ribbon condition - cloth or multiple-use typewriter ribbons gradually deteriorate


with use and the degree of deterioration is a measure of the ribbon condition.

Ribbon impression - typewriting made directly through a cloth or carbon film


ribbon.Original typewriting is made in this way.

River - gaps in the writing or printing pattern that form a stragglingwhite stream
down the page. 

Roller pen - a type of ball-point pen that uses aqueous ink.


Script - handwriting as distinguished from printing or lettering, cursive writing.

Secret ink - a material used for writing that is not visible until treated by
a  developing process, also referred to as sympathetic ink.

Sequence of strokes - the order in which writing  strokes are placed on he paper.


Serrations - roughness along the edges on an ink line seen under a microscope.

Shading - a widening of the ink stroke due to added pressure on a flexible pen point
or to the use of the stub pen.

Signatory - a signer with another or others.A person whose name is being inscribe
on a document who requires assistance in doing so.

Signature - the name of a person or mark representing it as written by


himself/herself.

Significant writing habit - any characteristic of handwriting that is sufficiently


uncommon and well fixed to serve as a fundamental point in the identification.

Single-element typewriter - typewriters using either a type ball or type wheel


printing device>The IBM selectric machine was the first modern typewriter of the
group.

Skill - evidence of the writer's proficiency.

Slant - the angle or inclination of the axis of letters relative to the baseline.

Smeared-over writing - an obliteration accomplished by covering the original


writing with an opaque substance.

Spiral - that portion of a letter executing a spiral formation, popular designs of


commencement and termination in older styles of writings.

Splicing - a term used by document examiners to denote the slight overlapping of


two strokes after an interruption in the writing.It may be part of imitated, fraudulent
signatures that are prepared one or two letters at a time.

Splitting - the division of an ink line into two or more, ,ore or less equal portions by
a non inked area running generally parallel to the direction of the stroke, sometimes
called burring.

Spurious signature - a fraudulent signature in which there was no apparent attempt


at simulation or imitation.It is common form of forgeries encountered in investigations
of fraudulent checks where the person passing the checks depends on the
surrounding circumstances rather than upon the quality of the signature for his
success.

Synthetic dye inks - any ink consisting simply of a dye dissolved in water together
with the necessary preservatives.

Traced forgery - any fraudulent signature executed by actually following the outline
of a genuine signature with a writing instrument.

Transitory defect - an identifying typewriter characteristic that can be eliminated by


cleaning the machine or replacing the ribbon.Clogged typefaces are the most
common defects of this class.

Trash mark - mark left on a finished copy during photocopying, results from
imperfections or dirt on the cover glass, cover sheet, drum, or camera lens of a
photocopy machine.

Tremor - lack of smoothness due to lack of skill, consciousness of the writing act,
deliberate control of the instrument in copying or tracing or an involuntary, roughly
rhythmic, and sinusoidal movement.Wavy back and forth movement on a written
line. 
Twisted letter - each character is designed to print at a certain fixed angle to the
base line.Wear and damage to the type bar and the type block may cause some
letters to become twisted so that they lean to the right or left of their correct slant.

Type ball - a device containing a complete set of typeface of some single-element


typewriters.

Typeface - the printing surface of the type block or type element.The name of a
particular design of printed characters and symbols.

Typeface defect - any peculiarity in typewriting resulting from actual damage to the
typeface metal.

Typewriting system - typewriting device consisting of a machine, ribbon, and font.

Versal letter - those that mark important parts of the text, used for headings and
words written at the beginning of books or chapters, often distinguished by size,
color, and ornamentation which tends towards curves and flourishes.
Watermark - a translucent design impressed in certain papers during the course of
their manufacture.This is accomplished by passing a wet map of fibers across a dandy
roll, which is a metal cylinder containing patches of specific pattern designs.The
design patches are generally of two types, wire or screen.

Whirl - the curving upstroke usually of letters that have long loops but also on some
styles of the capital "W".

Wrong-handed writing - any writing executed with the opposite hand from that
normally used, often referred to as writing with the awkward hand.

Xerox - a positive photocopy made directly on plain paper.

Z-twist - a right-handed yarn twist in which the spiral slants like the middle part of
the letter "Z".

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