Cursive Diriw 4 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, invitations, social posts, packaging, craft labels, friendly, casual, whimsical, crafty, approachable, hand-lettered feel, friendly display, everyday script, casual branding, quick notes, monoline feel, brushy, looping, bouncy, rounded.
A lively cursive script with a lightly brushed, slightly textured stroke that shows subtle irregularities and occasional thickened turns. Letterforms are generally narrow and upright with rounded terminals, tall ascenders, and compact lowercase proportions, giving the line a vertical, rhythmic cadence. Connections are common in lowercase, with smooth entry and exit strokes and frequent loops in letters like g, y, j, and f; capitals are more standalone and simplified, mixing printed and script-like construction. Counters are open and shapes stay legible at text sizes, while the overall spacing feels a touch airy due to the slender strokes and tall extenders.
Well-suited for short to medium-length display text where a friendly handwritten voice is desired—such as greeting cards, party invitations, quote graphics, boutique packaging, and DIY/craft labeling. It also works for headings and pull quotes in lifestyle contexts, especially when paired with a simple sans for body copy.
The font reads as informal and personable, like neat hand-lettering done with a fine brush pen. Its looping joins and buoyant rhythm give it a playful, crafty tone that feels welcoming rather than formal or corporate.
Designed to emulate quick, confident cursive hand-lettering with consistent rhythm and easy readability. The narrow, upright stance and clean joins suggest an intention to stay versatile for everyday display uses while retaining an authentic hand-made feel.
The numerals and uppercase maintain the same hand-drawn character, with straightforward forms that prioritize clarity over strict uniformity. Stroke contrast is modest and driven by curvature, creating natural emphasis at bends and downstrokes without becoming calligraphic.