Cursive Wohi 10 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, casual, expressive, energetic, personal, urban, handwritten feel, quick marks, bold voice, display impact, personal tone, brushy, gestural, leaning, loose, spiky.
This font presents a fast, brush-pen handwritten look with a consistent rightward slant and a lively, slightly jittery baseline rhythm. Strokes show moderate, organic modulation with tapered terminals and occasional sharp hooks, giving letters a drawn, gestural feel rather than a polished script. Forms are tall and compact, with tight counters and economical curves; joins appear intermittently, so the texture alternates between connected flow and broken, pen-lifted shapes. Overall spacing is tight and the silhouette stays slender, producing a dense, energetic word shape.
It works best for display settings where a handwritten voice is desired—posters, album or event promotion, packaging callouts, and brand accents. The tight, slender texture supports short headlines and punchy taglines, and it can add personality to social graphics or quotes when set with generous line spacing. For longer text, it’s more effective in brief bursts rather than continuous paragraphs.
The tone is informal and immediate, like quick notes or bold marker lettering made in one pass. It feels dynamic and a little edgy, emphasizing motion and personality over refinement. The narrow, upright-tall rhythm gives it a modern, streetwise flavor suitable for attention-grabbing short phrases.
The design appears intended to capture the speed and pressure changes of a real brush or felt-tip pen, prioritizing spontaneity and character. Its compact, tall proportions and pointed terminals aim to create a distinctive, high-energy texture that stands out in display use while maintaining a consistent handwritten rhythm.
Uppercase forms read as assertive and angular, while lowercase remains simpler and more abbreviated, reinforcing a quick-hand impression. Descenders are long and prominent in letters like g, j, y, and q, adding vertical drama in longer lines. Numerals follow the same gestural logic with brisk diagonals and tapered ends, keeping the overall texture consistent across mixed content.