Cursive Rolof 14 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, greeting cards, social media, invites, friendly, playful, casual, crafty, cheerful, handmade feel, approachability, expressive headlines, casual branding, monoline feel, rounded, looping, bouncy, whimsical.
A lively, handwritten script with a rightward slant and smooth, rounded stroke endings. Letterforms show a bouncy baseline, open counters, and frequent looped entry/exit strokes, giving words a flowing rhythm without strict, continuous connections. Capitals are tall and gestural, with simplified, pen-drawn construction and occasional flourish-like terminals. Numerals follow the same casual, drawn rhythm, with soft curves and slightly varied proportions that reinforce the hand-made character.
Well-suited to branding accents, packaging labels, greeting cards, invitations, and social media graphics where an informal human touch is desired. It performs best for headlines, short quotes, and product names, and can also work for brief supporting text when set with generous size and spacing.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like neat marker or brush-pen handwriting in a greeting card. Its buoyant curves and looping forms feel upbeat and approachable, leaning more crafty and informal than formal or corporate. The slightly animated rhythm adds charm and a conversational voice.
Designed to mimic confident, upbeat handwriting with a clean, modern smoothness. The intent appears to balance legibility with charm by using simple cursive structures, rounded terminals, and expressive capitals while keeping the overall texture light and energetic.
Spacing and letter widths feel intentionally irregular in a natural handwriting way, which enhances authenticity in short phrases. Descenders are prominent and curvy (notably in letters like g, j, y), and the capital set reads as decorative but still legible. The sample text shows consistent stroke behavior and smooth joins, supporting cohesive word shapes at display sizes.