How it works
- 1
Choose a method
Pick Draw to sign freehand, or Type to generate a styled signature from your name.
- 2
Create your signature
Use your mouse, trackpad, or finger — or type your name and choose from multiple font styles.
- 3
Download as PNG
Hit Download and get a transparent PNG ready to drop onto any document or contract.
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What does your signature say about you?
Graphologists have long studied signatures as a window into personality. See your type below — each example uses a real font style that matches the trait.
Large & Bold
Big signatures signal confidence and a desire to be noticed. You own every room you walk into.
Small & Compact
Compact signatures belong to focused, detail-oriented minds who let results speak louder than presence.
Rising Upward
An upward-slanting baseline reflects energy and forward-thinking ambition. You see opportunity everywhere.
Underlined
Self-underlining is a mark of drive and self-assurance. You set high standards and hold yourself to them.
Stylized & Flowing
Complex, artistic signatures reveal an imaginative personality that values individuality over convention.
Clear & Legible
A readable signature means openness and directness. You have nothing to hide and value honest connection.
Graphology is not a scientifically validated practice. These interpretations are cultural and observational — shared here for curiosity and fun.
Why your signature matters in business
A signature is more than a legal mark — it's a personal brand. Here's how a strong, intentional signature can quietly work in your favour.
First impressions are instant
When you hand over a signed contract or letter, your signature is seen before your words are read. A confident, deliberate signature sets the tone for how others perceive your authority and credibility before a single sentence lands.
Consistency builds trust
Professionals who sign the same way every time signal reliability. Banks, legal teams, and partners all associate a stable signature with a stable person. Developing your signature and sticking to it is one of the simplest trust-building moves you can make.
Speed communicates confidence
Executives who sign quickly and decisively are perceived as people who act without hesitation. A slow, tentative signature can unconsciously read as uncertainty. Practising a fluid motion helps you project certainty even when you feel none.
It creates personal accountability
Signing your name to an agreement is an act of ownership. Business leaders who own their decisions — and whose signatures reflect that — are more trusted by partners and teams. A strong signature says: "I stand behind this."
It reinforces your personal brand
CEOs, founders, and public figures with distinctive signatures are more memorable. Your signature appears on emails, PDFs, contracts, and press releases. Treating it as a branding element — consistent, intentional, and unique — makes you recognisable across every touchpoint.
It crosses language barriers
In global business, your signature communicates when words cannot. A bold, assured mark on an international agreement conveys the same authority whether your counterpart reads English, Mandarin, or Arabic. It is one of the few truly universal professional signals.
How to design your perfect signature
A great signature doesn't happen by accident — it's designed. Follow these steps to build one that looks intentional, feels natural, and represents you well.
- 01
Start with your initials
Most strong signatures begin with a prominent first initial. It anchors the whole mark and is usually the most recognisable element. Try writing just your first initial in different sizes and pressures until one feels natural. That becomes your foundation.
- 02
Decide: full name, initials, or hybrid?
Full name signatures read as open and accountable. Initial-only signatures read as efficient and powerful. A hybrid — a clear first name, abbreviated surname — strikes a balance. Think about the contexts you sign in most: formal contracts, casual emails, creative briefs — and choose the form that fits.
- 03
Pick a dominant motion: loops, angles, or straight strokes
Loopy, rounded signatures feel approachable. Angular, sharp signatures feel decisive. Straight-line signatures feel modern and clean. Sketch all three styles of your name and notice which one aligns with how you want to be perceived professionally.
- 04
Add one signature element — not five
The best signatures have a single memorable flourish: a long underline, an extended loop on the last letter, a rising baseline, a distinctive capital, or a period at the end. Choose one deliberate detail and make it consistent. Piling on multiple flourishes looks busy rather than bold.
- 05
Test it at speed
Write your signature 20 times quickly — the way you would when signing a stack of documents. The parts that survive speed are your signature. The parts that fall apart under pace are noise. Strip those out. A great signature degrades gracefully under speed, not collapses.
- 06
Make it impossible to forge easily
The more personal your signature — idiosyncratic capital letters, unusual baseline angles, abbreviations only you know — the harder it is to replicate. Legible doesn't mean simple. Build in at least one element that comes naturally to your hand and no one else's.
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Practise daily for two weeks
Your signature will only feel natural if your hand has muscle memory for it. Sign a blank sheet 10 times every morning for two weeks. After that period, you'll stop thinking about it and it will flow. That automatic quality is what makes a signature look like it belongs to you.
Signature inspiration ideas
Not sure where to start? Here are concrete design directions you can try — each rendered in a matching style so you can see the effect before you pick up a pen.
The Monogram
Use just your initials, large and bold. Works especially well if your initials form an interesting shape or sound. Minimalist, powerful, and impossible to confuse with anyone else.
The Long Tail
Extend the last stroke of your name into a long, sweeping underline that tapers off. It adds elegance and finality — the visual equivalent of "mic drop." Great for creative and executive roles.
First Name + Initial
Write your first name in full, then abbreviate the surname to an initial. Feels personal yet efficient — common among founders and creatives who want warmth without formality.
The Rising Baseline
Let your signature naturally climb upward as you write. A rising baseline is associated with optimism and ambition — subtle enough that most people won't notice consciously, but they'll feel it.
The Double Underline
Two parallel lines beneath your name amplify authority. It reads as emphatic and self-assured — "I mean this twice." Used by executives who want their signature to feel like a stamp of approval.
The Compressed Sprint
Tighten the letter spacing and merge first and last name into one fluid motion. The result looks fast and decisive — like someone who has signed a thousand documents and will sign a thousand more.
Ready to try one of these styles?
Use the Type tool to see your own name rendered in different signature fonts instantly.
Try the Type Signature Tool