Cursive Utdat 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, headlines, energetic, brushy, casual, expressive, handmade, handwritten feel, brush texture, casual voice, expressive motion, organic imperfection, dry brush, textured, slanted, tapered, angular.
A lively, brush-pen script with a pronounced rightward slant and visibly textured strokes. Letterforms show tapered entries and exits, occasional swell-and-thin modulation, and slightly irregular edges that suggest dry-brush drag rather than a perfectly smooth stroke. The rhythm is quick and compact, with narrow proportions, short lowercase bodies, and ascenders/descenders that add vertical animation. Connections are frequent in running text, but joins vary naturally, reinforcing the handwritten character while keeping forms generally legible.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where the brush texture and energetic slant can be appreciated—brand accents, packaging labels, posters, social graphics, and punchy headings. It can also work for quotations or brief paragraphs when a personal, handcrafted tone is desired, especially with comfortable tracking and line spacing.
The overall tone is informal and kinetic, like fast marker lettering used for notes, packaging callouts, or personal messaging. Its textured brush feel adds a crafty, human warmth with a touch of grit, reading as confident and spontaneous rather than polished or formal.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, natural brush handwriting with visible stroke texture and slight irregularities, delivering an expressive script that feels immediate and human. Its compact proportions and strong forward motion aim to balance personality with practical readability for contemporary display use.
Capitals tend to be more gestural and open, often beginning with a stronger leading stroke that reads well as an initial or logo-style first letter. Numerals share the same brushy texture and slanted stance, giving mixed text a consistent, handwritten cadence. The texture becomes a key feature at display sizes, while at smaller sizes it reads more as a soft, organic roughness.