This page covers cursive worksheets for six C names: Caleb, Carter, Charlotte, Chloe, Claire, and Cooper. The cursive capital C starts every one of these with the same entry stroke, so once a child has that motion down, all six names share the same starting point. Each worksheet comes in A4 and US Letter sizes.
Looking for print style instead? Browse name writing worksheets — C.
Can't find a name? Use the Cursive Name Tracing Generator to create a worksheet for any name instantly.
Caleb

The hand doesn't lift once in Caleb — every letter connects straight through to the final b, which makes it a good name for practicing continuous pen pressure.
Carter

The r-t-e-r sequence near the end of Carter asks children to switch direction twice in quick succession, which is trickier in cursive than in print since there's no lifting the pen to reset.
Charlotte

At nine letters, Charlotte is the longest name on this page, and the double t near the end means crossing two t-bars without breaking the connecting stroke between them.
Chloe

The h-l combination at the start of Chloe requires two tall letters back to back, which takes more arm movement than most names start with.
Claire

Claire ends on a silent e, and in cursive that means finishing the name on a small closing loop rather than a full letter stroke — a detail worth pointing out before a child writes it the first time.
Cooper

The double o in Cooper is written as one continuous figure-eight motion in cursive rather than two separate circles, which is the opposite of how it's usually taught in print.









