Thank you
@Salman Khattak for your reply. I now understand.
I have been pondering this questions since my original post. I hope this makes sense for those who did not adhere to the rules.


What does all this mean? Using graph paper and not needing guided sheets.
1:1 Square - This is the ratio and geometry of the Roman Caps
3:4 Rectangle - This gives the closest to Spencerian slant degrees.
3:5 Rectangle - This gives the closest to the Golden Ratio rectangle. (My Fav)
5:3 Rectangle - This gives the closes to Spencerian connecting slant (Also Golden Ratio & my Fav)
Doing drills of ovals, as
@AnasaziWrites said is the primary principal. There are three ovals which one must practice, not one! (Main slant, Connecting Slant and the Horizontal.) The oval height should be the full breath of the small letter f.
My mistake in rendering Mario/Maria is multiple fold: (slant, spacing, termination stroke/connecting stroke, and pen size)
* Slant - the more the slant the faster the writing. I write really quick, so my slant tends to be more acute.
* Spacing - I kept the same spacing, hence rendering a very compressed writing. It should be the more the slant, the more inter-letter spacing (or the connecting slant should be more pronounced.) It is the connecting slant the determines the inter-letter spacing.
* Termination stroke or connecting stroke, or "the power to join" the letters. There's five types: low-to-low, low-to-high, high-to-middle, high-to-high, and the termination (often with flourish.)
* Finally the pen size. Choose wisely - bold to medium is for upright writing. Fine and extra fine nib are for slanted writing. The more the slant, the more extra fine the pen point must be to make the writing more legible.