Cursive Gomud 13 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, invitations, headlines, quotes, airy, elegant, personal, relaxed, lively, signature style, personal warmth, refined display, handwritten flair, monoline feel, looping, tall ascenders, long descenders, open counters.
A slender, forward-slanted script with a smooth, pen-drawn rhythm and gently tapering terminals. Letterforms are tall and compact with narrow proportions, long ascenders and descenders, and a notably small x-height that gives lowercase a delicate, tucked-in look. Strokes stay mostly even with subtle thick–thin modulation, and curves are built from continuous, flowing motion with occasional sharp entry and exit flicks. Spacing is variable and organic, and connections appear selective rather than uniformly joined, contributing to a natural handwritten cadence.
Well-suited to branding moments that need a personal signature feel—logos, packaging accents, beauty and lifestyle collateral, and invitation suites. It also works as a display script for short headlines, pull quotes, and social graphics where its tall, flowing forms can breathe. For longer text, larger sizes and comfortable line spacing help preserve readability.
The overall tone is intimate and refined, like quick, confident handwriting made for emphasis rather than formality. Its light presence and sweeping slant feel expressive and slightly romantic, while the tight proportions keep the texture neat and composed.
The design appears intended to capture a graceful, handwritten signature aesthetic with quick, continuous pen movement and elegant verticality. It prioritizes expressive gesture and a refined, airy texture over strict uniformity, aiming to look naturally written while remaining visually consistent across glyphs.
Uppercase shapes lean on long, looped strokes and simple construction, creating a prominent, calligraphic silhouette in headings. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with smooth curves and angled strokes that match the script’s momentum. The thin strokes and compact lowercase suggest better results with generous tracking and at larger sizes where the fine details and small interior spaces remain clear.