Cursive Fuloy 2 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, social media, airy, romantic, casual, delicate, handmade, personal touch, signature style, elegant display, decorative script, looping, monolinear, swashy, flourished, slanted.
A slender, slanted script with a smooth, monoline feel and gently tapered joins. Letterforms are built from narrow ovals and long, sweeping strokes, with frequent entry/exit flicks that create a continuous handwritten rhythm in words. Capitals are taller and more expressive, often featuring extended lead-in strokes and occasional looped forms, while lowercase shapes stay compact with tall ascenders and deep descenders. Spacing is open and the overall texture is light, with subtle contrast created more by stroke curvature and pressure-like thinning than by sharp thick–thin transitions.
Well-suited to invitations, greeting cards, and personal stationery where an informal signature-like script is desired. It also works for boutique branding, beauty or lifestyle packaging, and social media graphics, especially for short headlines, names, and accent text that can showcase its loops and swashes.
The tone is relaxed and personable, with an elegant, slightly whimsical flourish. It reads like neat, practiced handwriting—friendly rather than formal—bringing a soft, romantic character to short phrases and names. The generous loops and smooth slant add a sense of motion and warmth.
The design appears intended to capture a graceful handwritten script with consistent, controlled strokes and a decorative capital set. Its narrow, flowing build prioritizes elegance and personality in display use while maintaining a legible, continuous cursive rhythm in short-to-medium text.
Numbers and punctuation follow the same flowing, handwritten construction, keeping the set visually consistent in mixed text. The script connects readily in running words, but individual letter widths vary, giving lines an organic cadence. At smaller sizes, the fine strokes and tight interior counters in looped letters may benefit from extra size or contrast against the background.