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In poor Naskh fonts, the teeth (the vertical strokes that begin letters like Sīn , Shīn , Ṣād ) appear as monotonous picket fences. In Diwan Naskh, these teeth vary subtly in height and angle, mimicking the natural hesitation of a calligrapher’s hand, thus avoiding digital monotony.
. While others obsessed over the towering majesty of Thuluth or the swift curls of Diwani, spent his nights perfecting a single style: .
: Unlike the diagonal, "hanging" nature of Nastaliq, Naskh sits firmly on a linear axis, making it exceptionally easy to read in long blocks of text.
Most characters rest on a steady baseline, though the script allows for "stacked" ligatures when a letter begins within the tail of another. Noto Naskh Arabic - Google Fonts
: Mimics the 40–45° pen angle used by master calligraphers. Contextual Shaping