Cursive Pubo 14 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social media, invitations, quotes, friendly, playful, casual, lively, romantic, handwritten charm, signature look, expressive display, casual elegance, personal tone, monoline feel, brushlike, looping, bouncy, airy.
A lively cursive script with a rightward slant, tall ascenders, and compact lowercase proportions. Strokes show brush-pen behavior with pronounced thick–thin modulation and tapered terminals, plus occasional heavier downstrokes that create an inked, hand-drawn texture. Letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented with a slightly bouncy baseline rhythm; counters stay open and simplified, helping the script remain readable at display sizes. Capitals are flowing and calligraphic, often with entry/exit swashes, while lowercase forms favor smooth joins and looped structures in letters like g, y, and z.
Works best for short, expressive text such as logos, product labels, event materials, greeting cards, and social posts. It’s especially effective for headings, pull quotes, and name-forward layouts where the tall, narrow rhythm and brush contrast can be appreciated without crowding. For longer paragraphs or very small sizes, pairing with a restrained sans or serif will help maintain clarity.
The font reads as personable and upbeat, like quick but confident handwriting. Its energetic contrast and looping joins add a light, expressive charm that feels informal and welcoming rather than formal or ceremonial.
Designed to capture an elegant-but-casual handwritten voice with brush-pen contrast and smooth cursive connections. The narrow, vertical proportions and energetic swashes suggest an intention to provide a distinctive signature-like look for display typography while keeping letterforms familiar and approachable.
Spacing is naturally irregular in a handwritten way, with noticeable differences in sidebearings and stroke pressure across glyphs that reinforce authenticity. Numerals follow the same cursive, narrow construction, mixing simple forms with occasional flourish-like terminals, making them best suited to short numeric strings rather than dense tabular data.