Cursive Ehbim 7 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social media, posters, invitations, casual, lively, friendly, expressive, playful, signature feel, handmade warmth, informal tone, quick brush script, brushy, loopy, airy, slanted, monoline-ish.
A slanted, handwritten script with quick brush-pen energy and slightly irregular stroke rhythm. Forms are narrow and tall with long extenders, open counters, and tapered terminals that suggest fast, continuous movement. Stroke weight stays relatively consistent while pressure changes show up as subtle thick–thin moments and occasional ink-like swelling at joins. Uppercase letters are simplified and gestural, while lowercase shows more connected cursive behavior and looped constructions, creating an overall airy texture in text.
Best suited to short display settings where a human, handwritten feel is desired—logos and wordmarks, product packaging, social posts, quotes, headers, and casual invitations. It can also work for subheadlines or pull quotes when paired with a more neutral text face, but its narrow, lively rhythm is most effective when used with generous tracking and ample whitespace.
The tone feels personal and spontaneous, like a neat signature or note written with a felt-tip/brush pen. Its energetic slant and looping shapes give it an upbeat, approachable character suited to informal communication and lifestyle branding.
The design appears intended to mimic a swift, confident brush-script hand—balancing legibility with expressive movement. It prioritizes personality and a natural writing cadence over mechanical consistency, aiming for a contemporary, casual signature look.
Letterforms show deliberate looseness: some joins are tight while others break, and several capitals stand more like drawn initials than formal script caps. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with simple, upright shapes and occasional curves that keep the set cohesive. Spacing appears naturally uneven in a way that reinforces the hand-made impression rather than strict typographic regularity.