In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Glide on an left outside edge in a curve slightly to the left. Your arms should be straightened behind you. Your right knee should go up in the air in front of you. As you bring your knee up, bring your arms close to your chest. Imagine that you are trying to get on a bike. This is one method of getting comfortable with the feeling of a waltz jump). Keep in mind that you are not jumping yet, you are just getting the feel of the jump. As you start the take-off, you should be leaving the ice on your left toe-pick so it is the last part of your boot that leaves the ice. Never rise off the ground on a flat blade. Never think of rotation; if you are in the right starting position you will automatically make the half rotation necessary. Don't get frustrated if it takes you some time, just keep practicing until you can go pretty high off the ground. You're going to jump off the ground, lifting up your right leg, followed closely with your left leg. When you land, be sure to keep your right foot straight. After landing, you should be skating on your right leg with your left leg extended behind you, gliding backwards. do three or four of these, and do a forward inside three turn as soon as you turn, jump with your right leg and land.
Summary: Push and glide on your left leg with the left leg being slightly bent and the right bent slightly behind you. Kick your right leg up. Swing your right foot over, and immediately bring your left foot over and extend it behind you. As you swing your right foot over, you are going to jump with your left foot before the right foot hits the ground. If you are stroking forward, do two or three powerful strokes and bend your knees. If you are doing backwards crossovers, they should be left over right.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Tracing paper is made to be translucent, so you can clearly see what's underneath it. If you don't have a piece of tracing paper handy, you can use a piece of thin white computer paper. Use a steady hand and slowly trace over the lines, loops and dots in the signature. Try not to shake your hand or pick up the pencil as you trace. In order to produce a convincing signature, pay attention to the following:  The thickness of the lines. People naturally apply more pressure to certain parts of their signature. Maybe the right side of the person's "l" loop is thicker than the left side, for example. The slant of the signature. As you trace, pay attention to the natural slant of the signature and be sure to follow it. The order of the letter formation. For instance, does it look like the person crossed his Ts dotted his Is after completing the rest of the signature? This can affect the way the final signature looks. It's a subtle matter, but it can mean the difference between a decent forgery and one that's easy to call out as fake. Be sure it's aligned correctly so that it will look like it was signed in a natural way. Many people don't sign their signatures neatly and in a straight line, so take this into account when you're positioning the signature. Use a pencil or another pointed instrument to press fairly hard over the traced signature to make an impression of the signature on the desired forging area.  Don't press so hard that you tear the paper or change the way the signature will look. A deep impression will be noticeable as a sign of forgery, so try to make it as faint as possible while still leaving enough of an indent that you'll be able to go over it in pen. Carefully go over the indented signature with a pen. Don't lift your hand or make any shaky movements - try to make it look natural.
Summary:
Place a piece of tracing paper over the original signature. Use a pencil to lightly trace the signature. Place the tracing paper over the blank spot where you want to copy the signature. Make a signature impression. Remove the tracing paper and write the signature in pen.