Cursive Dereh 9 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, packaging, invitations, social graphics, airy, casual, lively, friendly, personal, handwritten feel, personal tone, signature style, expressive display, casual elegance, monoline, slanted, looping, bouncy, hand-drawn.
A slanted handwritten script with a lightly pressured stroke and a smooth, pen-like rhythm. Letterforms are tall and compact with long ascenders and descenders, and a notably small lowercase body that makes the capitals feel prominent. Strokes are mostly monoline with subtle thick–thin modulation and tapered terminals, giving the joins and curves a fluid, drawn-in-one-go feel. Spacing is tight and the set maintains an uneven, organic cadence where widths and stroke endings vary slightly from glyph to glyph for a natural handwritten texture.
Well suited to short display settings where its tall proportions and looping capitals can act as a focal point—such as logos, product names, invitations, and expressive pull quotes. It also works for casual packaging and social media graphics that benefit from a human, handwritten tone. For longer text, larger sizes and generous line spacing help preserve clarity and keep the delicate lowercase from feeling compressed.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick neat handwriting used for notes or headings. Its tall, looping forms add a touch of elegance while still reading as relaxed and approachable. The lively slant and bouncy baseline energy lend it a conversational, human presence rather than a polished calligraphic formality.
This design appears intended to mimic quick, confident handwriting with a clean pen stroke—capturing natural variation and momentum while staying legible for display use. The combination of compact lowercase, prominent capitals, and smooth joins suggests a focus on expressive word-shape and signature-like personality rather than strict uniformity.
Capitals are especially distinctive and gestural, with open counters and extended entry/exit strokes that create recognizable word shapes in short phrases. Numerals match the handwritten feel, with simple forms and rounded curves that keep the texture consistent in mixed content. At smaller sizes the small lowercase body can make words appear delicate, while larger settings emphasize the sweeping loops and signature-like movement.