Letter G Guide
Graffiti Letter G Across 6 Core Styles
Graffiti letter G breaks when the bite closes or the hook gets too loud. This guide helps you keep the bowl, mouth, and lower hook readable across six styles.
6-Style Playbook For Letter G
Each style keeps the same base structure but changes rhythm, mass, and finish.

Tag/Handstyle
Letter GGood handstyle G has a clear bite before it has attitude.
Do: Sketch the bowl first, leave the mouth obvious, then add the lower hook like a finish rather than the main event.
Avoid: Do not close the opening while chasing motion; the second G loses its bite, it starts reading like a dressed-up O.
Open Tag/Handstyle
Throw-up
Letter GThrow-up G should feel fat and fast, not swirly.
Do: Keep the bowl full, leave a visible bite, and make the hook a short accent instead of another big mass.
Avoid: Do not inflate the hook into a second bubble; once the lower half gets too loud, the whole letter turns sloppy.
Open Throw-up
Bubble
Letter GBubble G works when the mouth stays open and friendly.
Do: Round the main bowl first and tuck the hook underneath it, keeping enough inner space that the bite still feels intentional.
Avoid: Do not pile highlights around the mouth opening; shine in that spot makes G look closed even when the drawing is technically correct.
Open Bubble
Blockbuster
Letter GA strong blockbuster G is basically an O with one disciplined decision.
Do: Use a clean ring, cut a decisive bite, and keep the lower bar compact so the structure stays bold from a distance.
Avoid: Do not stretch the lower bar just because the wall feels wide; long tails make G lose the crisp bite that makes it work.
Open Blockbuster
Wildstyle
Letter GWildstyle G is only fun if the bite survives the styling.
Do: Lock a plain G skeleton, then let one interlock or arrow echo the hook while the bite stays easy to find on first scan.
Avoid: Do not stack arrows around the lower hook and mouth at the same time; that is the fastest route to unreadable Gs.
Open Wildstyle
3D
Letter G3D G falls apart the moment the hook and ring stop sharing perspective.
Do: Treat the bowl and hook as one solid object and push both back on the same axis while keeping the front bite crisp.
Avoid: Do not twist the hook into its own depth system; once the ring and hook disagree, the piece feels fake immediately.
Open 3DLetter Structure Snapshot
Focus
Keep the bowl, bite, and lower hook doing different jobs.
Spacing Rule
Protect the mouth opening before you stylize the hook.
Main Trap
Overworking the hook until the bite disappears and the G starts reading like O.
Drill Words For Letter G
Example words: GLIDE, GHOST, GRIT. Use one word per round and compare style readability.
Quick FAQ
What part of graffiti letter G should I lock first?
Lock the bowl and the bite first. If those two read clearly, you can style the lower hook later without losing the letter.
How do I keep graffiti G from closing up?
Guard the mouth opening early and leave it alone. Most Gs stop reading when the bite gets filled with outline weight, shine, arrows, or an oversized hook.
What word is best for first G drills?
Start with GLIDE. It gives G enough room to breathe and makes it obvious whether your hook is stealing too much space. Then move to GHOST and GRIT for tighter, sharper neighbors.
Navigation
Next Step
Turn Letter G Into Real Practice Rounds
Start with the generator for quick structure reps, then compare plans if you need clean downloads or longer volume sessions.
Support Guides
Use these when you want broader drills that support this single-letter page without stealing the main focus.
How To Draw Graffiti Letters
Use the four-pass structure method when your letter skeleton keeps drifting.
Graffiti Letters For Beginners
Reset on simple structure and spacing before you add extra style complexity.