Cursive Ekgom 1 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, social posts, quotes, greeting cards, branding, casual, friendly, playful, airy, handmade, handwritten feel, casual branding, expressive titles, friendly voice, loopy, bouncy, brushy, monoline, tall.
This cursive handwritten face uses tall, slender letterforms with a gently right-leaning stance and a brush-pen feel. Strokes are mostly monoline with subtle pressure-driven swelling at curves and terminals, and many characters end in tapered, flicked finishes. Curves are open and rounded, with occasional looped constructions (notably in capitals) that create a lively rhythm; spacing is generous enough to keep the texture light despite the narrow forms. In text, the baseline behavior is slightly bouncy and the joins are selective rather than fully continuous, preserving a quick, natural written cadence.
This font is well suited to short-to-medium text where a personal, crafted voice is desired, such as packaging, social media graphics, invitations, greeting cards, and lifestyle branding. It performs best at display sizes or comfortable reading sizes where the narrow, looped forms and tapered terminals have room to show their character.
The overall tone is informal and approachable, like neat personal handwriting done with a flexible marker. It reads as upbeat and conversational, with a light, breezy texture that feels modern and friendly rather than formal or ceremonial.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, confident brush-script note: legible, streamlined, and decorative without heavy ornament. Its proportions and energetic terminals suggest an emphasis on contemporary casual branding and expressive headlines rather than dense body copy.
Capitals are prominent and expressive, often using larger entry/exit swashes that stand out in short phrases and titles. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with rounded shapes and simple, flowing constructions, keeping the set visually consistent with the letters.