Train your hand
One-time scan of your own letters. After that, every notes render uses that hand.
Type your notes at full speed during lectures, then convert them into hand-written pages for revision — your handwriting, on lined or grid paper, the way you'd actually write them out by hand.
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Typing during a lecture is faster and more legible than handwriting. Studying from your own handwriting, though, helps recall — there's research behind the effect, but you've probably already noticed it. HandwriterAI bridges the two: capture notes on a keyboard, then re-render them in your own hand for the revision pass, on the kind of paper you'd have used in the first place.
One-time scan of your own letters. After that, every notes render uses that hand.
Markdown for headings, bullets and indents; LaTeX for any math. Drop them straight in.
Lined for prose, grid for working, dotted for diagrams. Render in under a minute and print to revise.
Capture at typing speed, revise from a hand-written copy. Math, equations, and code excerpts come through cleanly.
Condense typed notes into one-page summaries and print them as hand-written pages for a binder.
Term, definition, term, definition — typed once, rendered as a hand-written list you can fold and quiz from.
Pseudocode, algorithm steps, inline equations — rendered in your hand, easier to annotate when you study.
Headings, bullets, ordered lists, indents and bold/italic emphasis are honoured in the rendered hand.
Inline $...$ and display $$...$$ math render glyph-by-glyph alongside your prose.
Pick the paper that matches the subject — grid for STEM, lined for humanities, dotted for diagrams.
Multi-page lecture notes split cleanly across pages with consistent margins and line spacing.
Don't like one render — too neat, too messy? Re-roll for a fresh sampling in seconds.
Your scan and your typed notes live in a private bucket. Delete your account and they go with you.
Yes. Headings, bullets, indented sub-lists and bold/italic emphasis render as you'd expect, in your handwriting. Tables and complex layouts may simplify to text.
Not yet — HandwriterAI renders text and math, not freehand drawings. Leave space and add diagrams by hand on the printout.
Yes. Wrap math in $...$ for inline or $$...$$ for display blocks. Integrals, sums, fractions, matrices and Greek letters all render in your hand.
Yes. Page count is limited by your plan; on the free plan a typical lecture's worth of notes renders fine. Heavier use is on paid tiers.
No. A font reuses one shape per letter. HandwriterAI samples your actual strokes and varies every glyph, which is why it reads as a hand-written page.