Cursive Pymid 9 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, branding, social posts, invitations, greeting cards, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, lively, personal warmth, casual script, handmade feel, readable display, brushy, looping, rounded, bouncy, informal.
A fluid, handwritten script with a rightward slant and a brush-pen feel. Strokes are mostly monoline with gentle contrast created by pressure-like thickening on turns and downstrokes. Letterforms are rounded and open, with frequent looped joins, soft terminals, and occasional extended entry/exit strokes that give the line a buoyant rhythm. Capitals are simplified and readable rather than ornate, and overall spacing stays compact while allowing natural variation from glyph to glyph.
Works well for short to medium headlines where an easygoing handwritten feel is desired, such as packaging, boutique branding, quotes, invitations, and social media graphics. It can also serve as an accent face alongside a simple sans in layouts that need a personal, crafted voice.
The tone is warm and personable, like quick neat handwriting on a card or label. Its looping connections and soft curves read as upbeat and informal, suggesting friendliness and spontaneity rather than formality.
Likely drawn to provide a clean, legible cursive script that feels natural and human while remaining consistent enough for display and short text. The emphasis appears to be on friendly readability and a smooth, brush-like rhythm rather than decorative calligraphy.
The design maintains a consistent pen angle and smooth curvature, producing an even texture in longer text while still retaining hand-drawn irregularities. Descenders (notably in letters like g, j, y) add expressive movement, and the numerals share the same rounded, handwritten construction for cohesive mixed setting.