Cursive Idho 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, headlines, greeting cards, casual, friendly, handmade, playful, approachable, human touch, informality, energy, brush handwriting, warmth, brushy, bouncy, organic, rounded, lively.
A lively handwritten script with a brush-pen feel, showing gently tapered stroke endings and slightly irregular contours. Letterforms lean forward with a loose, bouncing baseline and variable widths that create an animated rhythm across words. Strokes are moderately contrasted, with rounded joins and occasional narrow counters, while terminals often finish in soft hooks or flicks. The overall texture is compact and quick, with small lowercase proportions relative to ascenders and a consistent, informal cadence.
Works best for short to medium-length settings where personality is the priority—packaging callouts, posters, café or boutique branding, social graphics, greeting cards, and casual display headlines. It can also serve as an accent alongside a neutral sans or serif in layouts that need a handwritten, human touch without becoming overly decorative.
The tone is warm and conversational, like quick note-taking or a personal message written with a felt brush pen. Its slight wobble and energetic movement convey spontaneity and ease rather than precision, giving text a cheerful, human presence. The style reads modern-casual, suited to friendly branding and informal editorial moments.
Designed to emulate fast, confident brush handwriting with an easy, personable flow. The emphasis appears to be on natural rhythm and charm—capturing small imperfections, varied stroke pressure, and a lively slant to make text feel written rather than typeset.
Connectivity varies: many lowercase letters link fluidly in running text, but breaks and lifted-stroke moments appear naturally, reinforcing the hand-drawn character. Capitals are simplified and slightly narrower, standing out through height and gesture rather than heavy ornament. Numerals follow the same casual brush logic with rounded shapes and open forms that match the alphabet’s rhythm.