It's true that handwriting just isn't very necessary anymore when most lines of work involve computers, but I still feel that it's an important form of expression. Before I decided to get a fountain pen--just before the new year--I didn't really care to have good handwriting. Of course I would frequently complain that my handwriting wasn't that good, but I never made any effort to improve it.Though I did, as I mentioned before, use calligraphy pens quite a lot in the past, I find that I just don't have much use for hand written anything anymore. Practically everything I do is on the computer, so I don't get much practice writing or even printing anymore. It's not quite a lost art but it is on the endangered species list, metaphorically.
It just wasn't important enough to me until I got a nice writing utensil. After all, what good is a nice pen if your handwriting is poor? As much as I enjoyed and still enjoy the handwriting practice, a great deal of it was out of that principle. And sure, it may not be practically necessary, but the personality handwriting can have is at the very least a nice sentiment. I think it is a skill that is easy to learn, and that it should be encouraged and celebrated.
One of the things that gave me encouragement to improve my handwriting before I actually decided to get a fountain pen was this, though I do feel his comment about batteries is a bit fallacious:
http://www.artofmanliness.com/2014/12/16/improve-your-cursive-handwriting/