Cursive Wogu 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, quotes, casual, lively, personal, expressive, retro, handwritten feel, expressive display, brush lettering, personal tone, brushy, slanted, looping, bouncy, textured.
This font has a brisk, right-slanted handwritten script look with brush-pen modulation and visibly textured stroke edges. Letterforms are compact and tall, with small lower-case bodies and prominent ascenders/descenders that create a lively vertical rhythm. Strokes taper into sharp entry/exit terminals, and curves are drawn with quick, slightly angular turns rather than perfectly smooth geometry. Connections appear in many lower-case sequences, but joining behavior is loose and organic, with occasional breaks and varied spacing that reinforce an authentic, hand-drawn cadence.
Best suited to headlines and short bursts of text where the brush texture and energetic rhythm can be appreciated—posters, packaging accents, social graphics, and pull quotes. It can work for casual branding elements or menu/signage-style treatments, especially when set with generous tracking and ample line spacing rather than in long paragraphs.
The overall tone is friendly and spontaneous, like quick notes or energetic signage. Its brushy movement and looping forms give it a warm, personable character, while the slant and contrast add a touch of vintage flair. The texture and irregularity keep it feeling human and informal rather than polished or corporate.
The design intent appears to be an expressive, brush-written script that captures speed, pressure, and imperfection for a natural handwritten feel. Its compact forms and animated capitals suggest a focus on attention-grabbing display typography with a personal, informal voice.
Capitals are especially gestural, with prominent loops and swashes (notably in letters like B, Q, and R), helping create emphasis in short words. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with simplified, slightly calligraphic shapes that read best at display sizes. The combination of tight counters, tall extenders, and textured strokes can reduce clarity in dense setting, so spacing and size choices matter.