Cursive Uflab 7 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, branding, packaging, headlines, invitations, elegant, expressive, airy, contemporary, romantic, signature feel, stylish display, handmade charm, expressive motion, brushy, calligraphic, slanted, monoline-flair, tapered.
This script shows brisk, right-leaning strokes with pronounced tapering that mimics a pointed brush or flexible pen. Letterforms are narrow and fast-moving, with long ascenders and descenders and a notably small lowercase body, creating an airy vertical rhythm. Stroke contrast appears through sharp hairline entries and heavier downstrokes, with frequent flicked terminals and occasional looped forms in capitals and select lowercase letters. Spacing is relatively open for a script, with many characters standing as discrete forms or lightly connected, giving the set a lively, handwritten cadence rather than a fully formal, continuous join.
This font is best suited to short, prominent settings such as logos, product names, packaging callouts, invitations, and editorial headlines where its sweeping capitals and tapered strokes can be appreciated. It can also work for pull quotes or social graphics, especially when generous line spacing helps preserve the light counters and long extenders.
The overall tone is polished yet spontaneous—like quick, confident signature writing. It reads as stylish and modern with a touch of romance, suitable for conveying personality and motion without feeling overly ornate. The energetic slant and tapered finishes add a sense of speed and flair.
The design appears intended to capture the look of quick brush-calligraphy: confident, slanted, and high-energy, with enough consistency to function as a cohesive typeface. Its narrow, elongated proportions and dramatic stroke modulation suggest an emphasis on stylish display use and signature-like personalization.
Capitals are large and gestural, often built from sweeping strokes that can dominate a line and set a strong initial. Numerals follow the same calligraphic logic with angled stress and tapered endpoints, visually consistent with the letters. In text settings, the tight lowercase scale versus tall ascenders/descenders produces a distinctly elegant, elongated silhouette.