Cursive Timiv 1 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, greeting cards, social graphics, craft branding, playful, friendly, casual, handmade, cheerful, handmade charm, casual emphasis, friendly voice, display impact, quick lettering, brushy, rounded, bouncy, chunky, loopy.
A chunky, brush-pen handwritten style with rounded terminals, soft corners, and subtly wobbly stroke edges that keep the texture distinctly hand-made. Letters show a lively baseline bounce and uneven rhythm, with simplified forms and generous curves rather than sharp joins. The uppercase is compact and sturdy, while the lowercase leans more cursive with looped entries/exits and occasional partial joining, producing an informal, note-like flow. Counters are small-to-moderate and the overall silhouette reads dense and ink-rich without feeling rigid.
This font works best for short-to-medium display copy where personality matters: packaging callouts, posters, invitations, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It also fits craft-oriented branding, kids and family-facing materials, and informal editorial accents such as pull quotes or section headers. For maximum clarity, it benefits from comfortable tracking and moderate sizes where the brush texture and loops can breathe.
The tone is warm and approachable, like quick marker lettering on a card or classroom poster. Its bouncy movement and rounded shapes give it a lighthearted, personable voice that feels conversational rather than formal. The overall impression is energetic and friendly, suitable for messaging that benefits from a human touch.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of bold, handwritten marker script—combining sturdy, readable shapes with lively cursive motion. It prioritizes charm and spontaneity over typographic strictness, aiming for an authentic hand-lettered feel that remains legible in common display contexts.
In text, the cursive tendencies are most evident in the lowercase, where loops and soft connections create a continuous rhythm, while capitals remain more stand-alone and display-oriented. Numerals follow the same hand-drawn logic, with simple, slightly irregular shapes that match the brushy weight and rounded finishes.