Cursive Korar 7 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logos, headlines, invitations, packaging, airy, elegant, intimate, fashion, poetic, signature feel, stylish handwriting, display elegance, personal tone, monoline, hairline, slanted, delicate, loose spacing.
A delicate, hairline script with a pronounced rightward slant and a lightly calligraphic rhythm. Strokes stay mostly monoline but show subtle pressure-like modulation, with long ascenders, deep descenders, and compact lowercase bodies that create a tall, willowy silhouette. Letterforms alternate between connected and broken joins, producing a sketch-like continuity rather than a fully formal connected script. Capitals are expressive and open, with sweeping entry and exit strokes that can extend well beyond the letter width, while counters remain small and understated.
Best suited to short display settings where its hairline texture and sweeping capitals can breathe—such as logo wordmarks, boutique branding, editorial headlines, cosmetics or fragrance packaging, and invitation or event titling. It can also work for pull quotes or signatures when set large with generous spacing and high contrast against the background.
The overall tone is refined and personal, like quick, stylish handwriting made for display. Its thin strokes and brisk motion read as modern and fashion-adjacent, with a quiet, poetic softness rather than bold exuberance.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, elegant handwritten signature feel—light, fast, and contemporary—while remaining legible enough for short phrases. Its proportions and extended strokes prioritize expressive gesture and a refined impression over dense text performance.
Because the strokes are extremely fine, the texture can appear faint at small sizes or on low-contrast backgrounds. The most distinctive character comes from the long, tapering strokes on capitals and the minimal, understated punctuation-like details in the lowercase (small dots and short cross strokes).