Cursive Woha 8 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, packaging, social graphics, posters, casual, playful, personal, lively, handmade, handwritten feel, personal tone, expressive motion, compact script, brush texture, looped, brushy, springy, textured, gestural.
A slanted, handwritten script with tall ascenders and descenders and a notably petite x-height. Strokes show medium modulation with brush-pen behavior—thicker downstrokes, lighter upstrokes—and occasional dry, textured edges that reinforce the hand-made feel. Letterforms are narrow and vertically energetic, with frequent loops on lowercase (notably in b, f, g, y) and softly tapered terminals. Spacing and widths vary naturally from glyph to glyph, creating an informal rhythm while keeping a consistent overall skeleton.
This style performs best in short to medium lines where its loops and stroke texture can be appreciated—such as invitations, greeting cards, packaging callouts, café menus, social media graphics, and headline or subhead applications. It can also work as a signature/accent face paired with a neutral sans or serif for readable body text.
The font reads as friendly and expressive, like quick but confident penmanship. Its narrow, upright energy and looping forms give it a lively, conversational tone suited to personal notes and informal branding. The slight roughness and stroke variation add warmth and authenticity rather than polish.
The design appears intended to capture a natural brush-pen script with a compact footprint and a lively, personal rhythm. It prioritizes expressiveness and handwritten character over strict regularity, aiming for an approachable, contemporary cursive look that feels spontaneous and human.
Uppercase forms lean toward simplified, signature-like constructions with occasional flourished entries and exits, while lowercase letters carry most of the cursive connectivity. Numerals follow the same brisk, handwritten logic with open curves and simple strokes, matching the script’s informal cadence.