Cursive Anmor 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, quotes, packaging, social media, greeting cards, casual, friendly, playful, personal, crafty, handwritten feel, casual branding, expressive script, human warmth, monoline feel, brushy, rounded, bouncy, loopy.
A lively handwritten cursive with a brush-pen feel, combining narrow letterforms with irregular, organic stroke edges. Strokes show subtle pressure changes and occasional tapering at terminals, with rounded joins and frequent looped forms in ascenders and descenders. The rhythm is bouncy and uneven in a natural way, and many letters imply connectivity even when not fully joined, giving words a continuous, flowing texture. Counters are compact, spacing is informal, and the overall silhouette stays tall and slender across both uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where a personal, hand-lettered voice is desired—such as headlines, pull quotes, invitations, greeting cards, and lifestyle branding. It can work well on packaging and social graphics where an informal, crafted impression helps differentiate the message. For longest passages, the lively rhythm and compact counters are likely better as an accent than as body text.
The font reads as warm and approachable, like quick note-taking or hand-lettered packaging. Its energetic loops and slightly messy ink texture add a playful, human tone that feels conversational rather than formal. The tall, narrow flow can also suggest modern casual branding with a handcrafted edge.
Designed to mimic quick, confident handwriting with a brush pen—maintaining legibility while preserving natural variations in stroke, spacing, and looped forms. The narrow, tall proportions and energetic movement suggest an intention to create a modern casual script that feels handmade and expressive in display settings.
Uppercase letters are simplified and narrow, blending smoothly with the lowercase style rather than acting as rigid display capitals. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with slim forms and occasional swash-like curves that keep the set cohesive. The texture and variable stroke edge make it more expressive than geometric scripts, favoring personality over strict regularity.