Cursive Edlob 7 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, invitations, social media, packaging, quotes, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, lively, human touch, casual note, cheerful display, quick handwriting, personal tone, monoline, loopy, bouncy, hand-drawn, informal.
A casual handwritten script with smooth, monoline strokes and gently tapered terminals. Letterforms lean forward with rounded bowls, open apertures, and frequent looped constructions, creating a flowing rhythm that alternates between connected cursive and simple lifted strokes. Ascenders and descenders are long and expressive, while the lowercase shows compact bodies and a buoyant baseline that gives words a slightly bouncy cadence. Capitals are large and gestural, often built from single sweeping strokes that read like quick marker or pen writing.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text such as greeting cards, invitations, social posts, product labels, and pull quotes where a personal voice is desired. It works well for headings and accent lines, especially when paired with a clean sans or simple serif for longer reading.
The overall tone is friendly and conversational, with a lighthearted, personable feel that suggests quick notes, invitations, and informal branding. Its loose joins and playful loops keep it relaxed rather than formal, adding a warm, human presence to short phrases and display lines.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, legible cursive penmanship with expressive capitals and looped strokes, balancing readability with an intentionally informal, human rhythm. Its construction prioritizes a natural handwritten flow over strict geometric regularity, aiming for warmth and spontaneity in display use.
Stroke endings are rounded and occasionally flicked, and the numerals share the same airy, hand-drawn simplicity with single-stroke construction and open counters. Spacing appears naturally irregular in a way that supports the handwritten character, and the more dramatic capitals can become dominant in mixed-case settings.