Cursive Uhmiz 5 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, quotes, casual, expressive, friendly, energetic, modern, handwritten feel, display impact, casual branding, signature style, brushy, slanted, looping, tapered, dry-brush.
A lively brush-pen script with a consistent rightward slant and pronounced stroke modulation. Letterforms show tapered entry/exit strokes, occasional pointed terminals, and a slightly dry-brush texture that suggests fast, pressure-driven writing. The rhythm is compact and upright-to-slanted with tight sidebearings, while counters stay open enough to keep forms readable. Uppercase characters are larger and more gesture-led, with simplified, swooping constructions; lowercase features small bodies with tall ascenders/descenders and intermittent connections rather than continuous joining.
Best suited for short, attention-grabbing text such as headlines, posters, product labels, and social media graphics where a handwritten accent is desired. It also works well for pull quotes, invitations, and branding moments that benefit from an approachable, brush-script signature. For longer passages, larger sizes and increased leading help maintain clarity.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick handwriting captured with a marker or brush pen. It feels spontaneous and upbeat, with enough polish to read as intentional rather than messy. The energetic slant and sharp tapers give it a contemporary, social, and slightly playful voice.
Designed to emulate quick brush-pen handwriting with expressive contrast and swift, gestural forms. The goal appears to be an informal script that reads confidently in display settings while preserving the natural variation and momentum of hand-drawn strokes.
Digit forms follow the same brush logic, with bold downstrokes and narrow, angled silhouettes that match the letter rhythm. Spacing in words appears intentionally tight, emphasizing a brisk handwritten flow; it benefits from generous line spacing to avoid collisions from tall extenders.