








Here are three paper blank links I kept
https://www.musicaneo.com/blan.....music.html
http://www.musictheory.org.uk/....._paper.php
https://madisonpaper.com/blank.....eet-music/
But in order to understand the alto clef, I've been searching for an 11-line great stave. Printing one out and placing on it the treble, alto and bass clefs is instructive. Unfortunately it's not easy to find a source, and a lot of people understand the great stave to be just the 10 lines for piano.
This site can be edited, though, so play with it: https://www.blanksheetmusic.net/#
(click on the staff to edit)
I still haven't learnt the alto clef, and I've partly forgotten the bass clef. I can still just about remember learning the treble clef the hard way when I was 10-ish (Every Good Boy Deserves Favours, etc), so maybe I should just learn the alto clef in the same way. The bass clef I must have learnt that way, but perhaps always (or for the first couple of years at least) having the bass clef for the left hand and the treble clef for the right had makes it harder to confuse the two?
This is how I've been trying to get my head around it: -
Err, I want to import a photo. I neither have permissions to do that, nor to delete this post!


Another option is Fiddlershop.
There are these on Fiddlershop:
Fiddlershop: Hal Leonard Standard Music Manuscript Paper- Spiral Bound (12 Staves)
and
Fiddlershop: Henle Music Manuscript Notepad 12 Staves, 50 Sheets
The Bumble Bee Flies
Learn Viola on Violaman and Fiddlerman's Fiddle Talk
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