Cursive Irmiv 3 is a light, narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, quotes, casual, friendly, airy, personal, relaxed, personal voice, quick handwriting, soft elegance, everyday script, monoline, slanted, looping, bouncy, hand-drawn.
A slender, slanted handwritten script with a smooth monoline stroke and gently rounded terminals. Letterforms are compact with a small x-height and long, lively ascenders and descenders that create an elastic vertical rhythm. Connections are intermittent rather than fully continuous, giving words a lightly linked, quick-written feel. Counters stay open and forms are simplified, with occasional loops and soft entry/exit strokes that keep the texture airy and informal.
Works well for short to medium lines where a personal, handwritten voice is desired—greeting cards, invitations, social posts, and quote graphics. It can also support light branding accents (logos, labels, packaging callouts) when paired with a simple sans for body copy. Best used at sizes where the delicate strokes and compact lowercase remain clear.
The overall tone is casual and personable, like neat notes written quickly with a fine pen. Its light footprint and flowing motion feel friendly and approachable, with a slightly playful bounce rather than formal elegance. The script reads as conversational and everyday, suited to warm, human-centered messaging.
Designed to capture a quick, refined handwriting look with a smooth, pen-like flow and minimal stroke emphasis. The intent appears to balance legibility with an informal cursive rhythm, offering expressive capitals and tidy lowercase for a natural, note-taking authenticity.
Uppercase letters are more gestural and signature-like, with larger swashes and occasional looped constructions that can stand out strongly at the start of words. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic—simple, slightly slanted, and consistent in stroke—so they blend naturally in running text. Spacing appears relatively open for a script, helping keep the word shapes from becoming overly dense despite the narrow proportions.