Cursive Uhlud 1 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logotype, packaging, headlines, invitations, elegant, expressive, romantic, personal, lively, signature feel, modern elegance, handmade warmth, display impact, fast brush, brushy, fluid, slanted, tapered, looping.
A slanted, brush-pen script with energetic, calligraphic strokes and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Letterforms are narrow and fast-moving, with tapered terminals, occasional sharp entry/exit cuts, and a slightly springy baseline rhythm. Capitals are larger and more gestural than the lowercase, often built from single sweeping strokes with open counters and selective loops. Spacing is compact overall, with a mix of connected and near-connected joins that keeps words flowing while preserving individual letter shapes.
Well-suited for branding moments that benefit from a handwritten signature tone—logos, boutique packaging, beauty and lifestyle collateral, and short headline typography. It also works nicely for invitations, greetings, and social graphics where expressive capitals and brush contrast can carry the design. For best results, use at larger sizes where the tapering and stroke modulation remain clear.
The font reads as stylish and personable, combining a modern brush-signature feel with a refined, editorial sheen. Its quick stroke turns and high-contrast swells create a sense of motion and spontaneity, making the tone feel confident, romantic, and slightly dramatic.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of brush lettering in a clean, repeatable script, balancing expressive swashes with a controlled rhythm for readable display text. The narrow, slanted construction and dramatic stroke contrast aim to deliver a fashionable, signature-like presence across titles and short phrases.
Lowercase proportions emphasize tall ascenders and compact bowls, giving text a vertical, airy texture. Numerals follow the same brush logic, with angled stress and tapered endings, visually consistent with the letters. The sample text shows strong word-shape coherence at display sizes, where the stroke contrast and sweeping capitals become the primary visual feature.