Cursive Polal 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, wedding invites, quotes, packaging, social posts, playful, whimsical, friendly, romantic, handmade, handwritten elegance, friendly display, personal touch, celebratory tone, looping, bouncy, calligraphic, upright-leaning, airy.
A lively cursive script with a strong pen-like contrast between thick downstrokes and fine hairlines. Strokes are smooth and rounded with frequent loops, teardrop terminals, and soft, tapering entries and exits that mimic a flexible nib. Letterforms are generally compact and narrow with a rhythmic, slightly bouncy baseline, while the capitals are taller and more gestural, often starting with extended lead-in strokes. The overall texture is clean and consistent, balancing fluid connectivity with occasional separated forms in the sample text.
This script suits short, expressive settings such as invitations, greeting cards, branding accents, packaging labels, and social media graphics. It performs best at display sizes where the hairlines and loops stay clear, and where its animated rhythm can add personality to names, titles, and pull quotes.
The font feels cheerful and personable, with a lighthearted, handwritten charm. Its looping forms and springy rhythm give it a whimsical, inviting tone that can read as sweet or celebratory depending on spacing and size. The contrast and elegant swashes add a subtle sense of refinement without losing its casual friendliness.
The design appears intended to capture the look of quick, confident handwriting with a calligraphic tool—combining refined contrast with informal, flowing connections. Its compact proportions and energetic terminals suggest a focus on decorative readability for headlines and personal messaging rather than long-form text.
Ascenders and capitals create a prominent vertical presence, while the lowercase counters remain relatively small, producing a delicate, lacy page color at text sizes. Several glyphs show expressive entry strokes and curled terminals that become more noticeable in headings, and the numerals follow the same calligraphic contrast with simple, handwritten shapes.