Cursive Ufren 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logotypes, headlines, packaging, social media, expressive, energetic, personal, casual, edgy, signature feel, handmade texture, dynamic motion, bold emphasis, personal voice, brushy, slanted, spiky, loopy, gestural.
A slanted, brush-pen script with quick, tapered strokes and noticeable pressure-driven contrast. Letterforms lean forward with long, sweeping entry and exit strokes, sharp terminals, and occasional dry-brush texture that makes some counters look slightly ragged or sketchy. Uppercase shapes are simplified and signature-like, while lowercase is compact with tight bowls and short ascenders, giving a brisk, handwritten rhythm. Spacing is lively and uneven by design, with forms that feel drawn in one pass rather than constructed.
Well-suited to display applications where a handwritten voice is desirable, such as posters, album/cover art, branding accents, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It works especially well for short phrases, names, and signature-style marks where the dynamic stroke contrast and slanted rhythm can be appreciated.
The overall tone is bold and spontaneous, like a fast personal note or a confident signature. Its brisk slant, sharp joins, and brushy modulation create an energetic, slightly rebellious feel that reads more expressive than formal. The texture and irregularities add human warmth and immediacy.
The design appears intended to capture a quick brush-script gesture with a confident, one-take quality—combining sharp, modern strokes with occasional loops and textured edges. It aims to deliver personality and motion more than typographic neutrality, emphasizing expressiveness and a signature-like presence.
Numbers and capitals share the same gestural logic, with angled strokes and occasional exaggerated swashes that can become visually dominant at larger sizes. The texture and narrow internal spaces suggest it will look strongest when given generous line spacing and used in short bursts rather than dense paragraphs.