Learn khat from the tip of the qalam to a piece worthy of framing. Naskhi as the foundation, then Riq'ah and Thuluth, with proportions measured by the nuqthah. For children, teens, adults, and seniors alike, through private lessons at home and online with calligraphers trained in the Arabi Method.
Calligraphers who are campus graduates, trained in the Arabi Method
3 Khat StylesNaskhi, Riq'ah, and Thuluth, step by step
3 Khat StylesNaskhi, Riq'ah, and Thuluth, step by step
The Nuqthah RuleEvery letter measured by the dot
5,000+Quran and Arabic language teachers
Every AgeChildren from 5 years to seniors
2 WaysIn person at home and online
3 Khat StylesNaskhi, Riq'ah, and Thuluth, step by step
The Nuqthah RuleEvery letter measured by the dot
5,000+Quran and Arabic language teachers
Every AgeChildren from 5 years to seniors
2 WaysIn person at home and online
Quick Answer
What is the Arabic calligraphy (khat) course at Arabi?
Arabi's Arabic calligraphy (khat) course teaches the art of writing Arabic letters beautifully and with correct rules. You learn how to hold the qalam, how to measure each letter using the nuqthah (the dot unit), how to master Naskhi as your foundation, then move up to Riq'ah and Thuluth.
Key points
Strokes are measured by the nuqthah dot unit, so the proportions of each letter stay true.
Naskhi is made solid first as the parent style, before moving up to Riq'ah and Thuluth.
Every practice sheet is corrected directly by the calligrapher, from line thickness to letter spacing.
Open to children from 5 years old, students, professionals, and seniors.
Quick facts
Khat styles
Naskhi, Riq'ah, Thuluth
Unit of measure
The nuqthah dot from the qalam tip
How you learn
Private, in person and online
Age
5 years to seniors
The Arabi Khat Method
Inheriting the Way of the Master Calligraphers, Arranged for Beginners
Khat has been passed from teacher to student through copying examples and direct correction. Arabi preserves this way and arranges it into clear steps.
Copying the teacher's example
Manqul
You write over or beside the rule example, training your eye and hand to recognize the correct shape of each letter before writing on your own.
Learning face to face
Talaqqi
The calligrapher draws the strokes in front of you and shows the hand movements that words alone cannot explain, from the angle of the qalam to the pressure of each stroke.
Assessing every sheet
Stroke Correction
Each practice is marked where it needs fixing, from line thickness, to the evenness of the rows, to the spacing between letters, so the proportions keep improving.
The Arabi Method arrangement
Gradual Levels
One style is made solid before moving on, so the foundation of your strokes stays strong and steady as the material grows.
For generations, calligraphers (khattat) learned by copying their teacher's work letter by letter, then offering their practice for correction until the strokes stayed faithful to the rules. This is the tradition Arabi preserves and arranges into orderly levels, so a beginner who has never held a qalam has a clear path toward a finished piece.
The Learning Map
Six Khat Milestones, from the First Line to a Framed Piece
Six milestones that mark real progress, measured by the quality of your strokes and the steadiness of each stage.
Milestone 1
Controlled Lines and Dots
You canhold the qalam at the correct angle and produce clean thick and thin lines as well as tidy nuqthah dots.
Correct qalam angle
Thick and thin lines
Neat rhombus dots
Milestone 2
Single Naskhi Letters
You canThe 28 hijaiyah letters in the Naskhi style are written at the correct dot measure, both above and below the baseline.
28 Naskhi letters
Nuqthah measure for each letter
Position on the baseline
Milestone 3
Joins and Words
You canLetters join in their initial, medial, and final positions, forming words with balanced proportions.
Joins in three positions
Word proportion
Spacing between letters
Milestone 4
Sentences and Riq'ah
You canwrite neat short sentences and become acquainted with the Riq'ah khat, the compact style for quick writing.
Neat short sentences
Introduction to Riq'ah
Quick, readable writing
Milestone 5
The Majesty of Thuluth
You canbegin to master the broad curves and layered arrangement of the Thuluth khat, used for ornament and wall calligraphy.
Broad Thuluth curves
Layered arrangement
Wall ornament
Milestone 6
Composition Work
You canarrange a phrase within a single field, managing the empty space and border ornament, until the piece is worthy of framing.
Single field layout
Managing empty space
Border ornament and finishing
Each milestone is measured by the quality of your strokes, so you advance with a correct foundation at every step.
Who It Is For
Khat Is Open to the Patient and Diligent, at Any Age
Arabic calligraphy calls for precision, patience, and repeated practice under correct rules. That is why Arabi opens khat classes for a range of needs and ages, with guidance suited to each learner.
Children and Teens
Building precision and patience early, while nurturing a love for the letters of the Quran through enjoyable strokes.
Students Who Love Writing as Art
Preparing for the khattil Quran competition (MKQ) or beautifying personal notes and works with correct rules.
Adults and Professionals
Channeling a calming hobby and producing framed pieces for the home or as a meaningful gift.
Seniors and Mosque Volunteers
Filling time with a meaningful activity that builds calm, while becoming skilled at writing mosque wall ornament and event decoration.
Child Readiness
Signs You Are Ready to Begin Khat
Arabic calligraphy is open to beginners and the already trained alike. The points below give a picture of how ready your hand and eye are, and the calligrapher sets your level through an opening consultation.
A Child Ready to Begin
Already able to hold a pen steadily
Recognizes some of the hijaiyah letter shapes
Enjoys tracing lines and shapes with diligence
Teens, Adults, and Seniors
Wishes to learn from scratch or to firm up a familiar style
Willing to practice repeating strokes at home
Has regular time for one session each week
What Arabi Prepares
A free level-placement consultation
Rule sheets, stroke examples, and tracing practice
A qalam and tool guidance suited to your stage
Comparison
Learning Khat with Arabi Compared to Other Ways
There are many ways to learn Arabic calligraphy, and each has its place. Here is an honest picture, so you can choose with open eyes while still respecting every option.
Aspect
Arabi Private Khat
Self-Study from Video
School Extracurricular
Stroke correction
Every stroke is corrected directly by a calligrapher
No one fixes the strokes, and errors in measure easily settle in
One teacher for many children, so correction per student is limited
Rule of measure
Measured by the nuqthah dot unit from the start
Often guesswork without a standard yardstick
Basic introduction, the rule of measure rarely detailed
Level arrangement
Levels arranged to match each student's progress
Depends on personal discipline to choose the order
Levels hard to arrange because of limited time
Place and schedule
Fitted to you, in person at home or online
Flexible, yet without a guide alongside you
Tied to the school's schedule and place
Pricing
Arabic Calligraphy Online Cost
The price is the same for all cities. Learn privately at home or online. Contact Arabi for a free initial assessment.
Or pay per session: Rp 55.100 online, Rp 72.870 private, tutor visits your home.
The Path of Achievement
Khat Opens the Way, from Hobby to the MKQ Competition
For those who wish to go further, Arabic calligraphy has a real path of achievement through the Musabaqah Khattil Quran. This achievement grows alongside practice, and Arabi guides it honestly according to each student's ability.
The Naskah (Manuscript) Branch
Writing verses in the required and chosen styles neatly and correctly within a limited time, training the speed and accuracy of the strokes.
The Decoration Branch (Mushaf Ornament)
Combining writing with ornament and color, calling for mature composition of space and aesthetic balance.
The Contemporary Branch
Exploring khat styles in free composition that still stands on the correct rules of the letters.
Arabi introduces the demands of each branch and guides its rules strictly for students who are interested.
Reviews
Stories from Arabi Calligraphy Students
4.9From 246 parent reviews
My child, who used to lack patience, now traces lines and dots with care. The calligrapher draws in front of him, so he knows exactly how the hand moves.
I started from scratch in my thirties. Learning Naskhi with the nuqthah rule made my writing neat, and I have already framed my first basmalah.
Through guidance in the naskah branch, I came to understand the required and chosen styles. Correction on every sheet made my strokes more measured ahead of the MKQ.
FAQ
Questions About the Arabic Calligraphy Course
How does online Arabic Calligraphy work at Arabi?
Sessions run via video call. The teacher listens to your recitation live, corrects makhraj and tajwid on the spot, and shares a digital mushaf on screen. You can also learn through the Arabi app, with flexible schedules across Indonesian time zones.
Is online Arabic Calligraphy as effective as in person?
Yes. Learning stays one on one and the teacher hears every letter through the microphone, so corrections are immediate. Online removes travel time and reaches families anywhere, while keeping the same Arabi method and level progression.
Can I learn Arabic calligraphy from scratch without being able to draw?
Yes. Arabic calligraphy calls for precision and practice with correct rules, and this can be trained by anyone. You start by holding the qalam, training lines and dots, then measuring letters with the nuqthah unit. Arabi's calligraphers guide you step by step, so even a beginner who has never held a qalam can reach a piece worthy of framing.
What khat styles are taught at Arabi?
Arabi teaches three core styles step by step. Naskhi is taught first because its forms are clear, easy to read, and serve as the parent of the other styles. Once Naskhi is solid, you become acquainted with the compact Riq'ah for quick writing, then the majestic Thuluth with its broad curves for ornament and wall pieces. Each style has its own rule of measure, trained gradually.
What is the nuqthah rule in Arabic calligraphy?
The nuqthah is a rhombus-shaped dot unit printed from the tip of the qalam, used to measure each letter. The height of the alif, the width of the ba, and the curve of a letter are all measured by a certain number of dots. With this measure, your writing becomes balanced and faithful to the same rules of khat the masters have used for generations.
What is the minimum age for a child to join the Arabic calligraphy course?
A child who can already hold a pen steadily and recognizes the hijaiyah letters is generally ready to begin, usually around 5 years and above. For children, the guidance is suited to the steadiness of their hand and their span of focus, starting from simple lines and dots. A free consultation via WhatsApp 628164896943 helps us gauge your child's readiness.
Can the calligraphy course be done online?
Yes. Arabi offers khat classes at home or online through the screen. In an online class, the calligrapher draws the example live and you send photos of your practice to be corrected on the spot. Online learning is also supported through the Arabi App, and registration is done through daftar.arabi.id.
Does Arabi prepare students for calligraphy competitions such as the MKQ?
Yes, for students who are interested. The Musabaqah Khattil Quran (MKQ) judges the beauty and rules of the writing across the naskah, decoration, and contemporary branches. Arabi's calligraphers guide the rules strictly and introduce the demands of each branch. This preparation grows alongside practice, and we guide it honestly according to each student's ability.
How long does it take to be able to create a calligraphy piece?
The time differs for each person because khat is measured by the quality of strokes that keep improving. What matters is diligent practice and the steadiness of each milestone, from controlled lines, to Naskhi letters, to joins, to composition. With regular practice and periodic correction, many students have produced a first basmalah piece worthy of framing within a few levels.