Cursive Yeji 5 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, brand accents, energetic, casual, expressive, confident, handmade, handmade warmth, speedy script, brush texture, casual emphasis, brushy, slanted, textured, dynamic, angular.
A slanted handwritten script with a brush-pen feel, showing tapered entries, occasional blunt terminals, and subtly rough edges that mimic ink drag. Strokes move quickly with a rhythmic rightward lean and medium modulation between thickened downstrokes and lighter connectors. Letterforms are compact and slightly irregular in width, with a mix of open curves and sharper angles; capitals are large, looser, and more gestural than the lowercase. Connections are intermittent rather than strictly continuous, giving words a lively, sketched cadence while maintaining a consistent baseline flow.
Well-suited for short-to-medium display copy where an energetic handwritten voice is desired, such as posters, product packaging, cafe or lifestyle branding accents, and social media graphics. It can also work for pull quotes or titling where a brushy, personal texture helps differentiate the message from surrounding typography.
The font reads as upbeat and informal, with a confident, spontaneous tone that suggests quick note-taking or hand-lettered signage. Its lively slant and brush texture add personality and motion, creating a friendly, human presence rather than a polished calligraphic formality.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush handwriting—fast, expressive strokes with controlled slant and readable letterforms—balancing personality with enough consistency to function in display text.
Uppercase forms carry prominent entry/exit strokes and occasional dramatic flourishes, while lowercase remains comparatively restrained and efficient. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic—simple, slightly angled shapes that match the script’s tempo. The overall texture is darker in clusters where strokes overlap, producing a natural, hand-rendered color on the line.