Thanks for the compliments.
I've seen some very beautiful Korean handwriting -- unfortunately mine is not (not yet that is
). You know what they say though, "practice makes perfect." I still have a lot more practicing to do.
I've been around Korean language enough to know that Koreans also have a kind of 'cursive' script, sort of writing Hangul without hardly lifting the pen off the paper, but this style does not appear to be something that is formally taught in the way that English cursive style is taught. Korean 'cursive' is often written in haste, but some people have quite an artistic hand, either way it is usually hard for a foreign student of Korean to read. Heck - I have trouble reading my own Hangul writing sometimes.
A good handwriting practice is simply to hand copy something you are studying onto another sheet of paper.
Another method is to use children's books where there is usually a lot of space between the lines and write the story out directly underneath, syllable-by-syllable, word-by-word, as fast as you can. This will improve your writing because you are forced to write in a confined space (between the lines), but it is not such a good language practice because most people will just look and copy as if the words were hieroglyphics, rather than read and sound out as they go. Needless to say, the book is ruined.