Cursive Bubab 13 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social posts, quotes, greeting cards, friendly, casual, playful, personal, lively, handwritten feel, brush script, casual tone, display use, natural flow, looping, brushy, slanted, tapered, rounded.
A lively cursive script with a pronounced rightward slant and brush-pen construction. Strokes show tapered entry and exit terminals with intermittent swelling through curves, creating an expressive calligraphic rhythm. Letterforms are narrow and compact, with rounded bowls, frequent loops in descenders and capitals, and a generally smooth, continuous flow. The baseline is steady, counters are moderately open, and joins are soft rather than sharply angular, giving the set a cohesive handwritten texture across upper- and lowercase as well as numerals.
Well-suited for short to medium-length display settings where a personal, handwritten voice is desired—logos, boutique branding, packaging labels, greeting cards, invitations, and quote-driven graphics. It can also work for headings and pull-quotes in editorial or digital layouts when a casual script accent is needed.
The overall tone feels warm and informal, like quick but confident handwriting. Its energetic loops and brisk slant suggest approachability and spontaneity, with a slightly playful, conversational character rather than a formal invitation script.
Designed to emulate fluid brush handwriting with an even, repeatable rhythm suitable for set text, while retaining enough natural variation in stroke weight and terminals to feel hand-drawn. The compact proportions and consistent slant prioritize a smooth cursive flow that stays legible in common display sizes.
Capitals read as simplified, brushy initials that pair naturally with the lowercase without feeling overly ornate. Descenders (such as in g, j, y) are prominent and looping, adding motion and personality in running text. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with curvy forms and tapered terminals that keep them visually consistent with the alphabet.