Cursive Esmul 1 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, headlines, quotes, social media, elegant, airy, personal, casual, lively, handwritten feel, display script, signature style, modern calligraphy, brushy, flowing, slanted, loopy, tall ascenders.
This script has a fluid, brush-pen character with a consistent rightward slant and softly tapered stroke endings. Letterforms are narrow and tall, with long ascenders and descenders and a relatively small lowercase body that keeps counters tight and the rhythm vertical. Strokes show gentle modulation and occasional pressure-like thickening at turns, while joins alternate between connected and semi-connected construction, giving words a continuous flow without becoming overly dense. Capitals are larger and more gestural, often beginning with looped or swept entry strokes, and figures follow the same handwritten logic with simple, slightly angled forms.
It suits branding marks, packaging callouts, and editorial-style headlines where a handwritten signature feel is desired. It also works well for short quotes, invitations, and social media graphics, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the slender strokes and narrow forms remain clear.
Overall it reads as personable and stylish—more polished than quick note-taking, yet still informal and human. The narrow, upright-tall proportions and looping capitals add a touch of elegance, while the brushy texture keeps it approachable and contemporary.
The font appears intended to mimic a modern brush-script hand: narrow, fast-moving strokes with selective connections to preserve legibility. Its emphasis on expressive capitals and a flowing baseline suggests it was designed for display settings that need a personal, stylish tone rather than dense text.
The design relies on long, clean curves and tight spacing within letters, so it presents best when given room to breathe. Uppercase forms are noticeably more expressive than lowercase, creating a strong initial-letter emphasis in titles and names.