Cursive Tomip 5 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, sportswear, social media, energetic, casual, expressive, sporty, confident, brush lettering, high impact, handmade feel, dynamic motion, display focus, brushy, slanted, textured, pointed, dynamic.
A slanted brush-script with compact proportions and a lively, uneven stroke rhythm. Letterforms show tapered starts and finishes, frequent sharp joins, and occasional rough, ink-like texture where strokes overlap or change direction. Curves are narrow and upright in structure but pushed forward by the italic angle, with a mix of rounded bowls and pointed terminals that keep the silhouette crisp. Spacing is tight and the baseline feel is slightly elastic, reinforcing the hand-drawn momentum.
Best suited to display settings where personality and motion matter—posters, attention-grabbing headlines, packaging callouts, and brand marks that want a handwritten edge. It also works well for short social media phrases and sporty or street-style graphics, while extended paragraphs may feel dense due to the tight, energetic rhythm.
The font conveys fast, spontaneous handwriting with a bold, energetic attitude. Its brushy pressure changes and sharp accents suggest motion and urgency, reading as informal and expressive rather than delicate or ceremonial. Overall it feels contemporary and street-adjacent, with a confident, punchy presence.
Likely designed to emulate quick brush lettering: compact, forward-leaning forms with visible pressure changes and textured overlaps. The intent appears to prioritize impact and expressiveness at larger sizes, capturing the immediacy of hand-painted script in a consistent, repeatable typeface.
Connections between letters are suggested by the script construction, but many characters retain distinct, gestural forms rather than perfectly continuous joins. Uppercase shapes are especially assertive and angular, while lowercase maintains a consistent forward lean and compact counters, helping lines of text look dense and active.