Cursive Ulvo 4 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, posters, packaging, social media, invitations, casual, energetic, friendly, expressive, playful, handwritten feel, brush lettering, expressive display, friendly tone, brushy, slanted, looping, bouncy, organic.
A lively, brush-pen script with a consistent rightward slant and high-contrast strokes that shift between thick downstrokes and finer hairlines. Letterforms are loosely connected in text, with frequent entry/exit strokes and rounded terminals that keep the rhythm flowing. Proportions feel compact with a relatively short x-height, while ascenders and descenders add vertical animation. The texture is intentionally organic—strokes show slight variation and a hand-drawn cadence—yet spacing remains legible, with open counters and clear silhouettes across both cases and numerals.
Well-suited for short, expressive copy where personality matters—logos, product labels, poster headlines, social graphics, and event or party invitations. It also works for quotes and display lines that benefit from a handwritten, brush-script feel. For best clarity, use at display sizes or with comfortable letterspacing in denser layouts.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick marker lettering on a note or café board. It conveys motion and confidence, balancing a relaxed charm with a slightly dramatic, calligraphic flair. The bouncy rhythm and looping details give it an upbeat, approachable character.
Designed to emulate fast, confident brush lettering with an italic forward drive and lively stroke modulation. The intent appears to be an expressive script that reads clearly while retaining the spontaneity and charm of hand-drawn writing.
Capital letters are more gestural and showcase broad, sweeping strokes, creating strong word-shape contrast against the smaller lowercase. The numerals share the same brushy modulation and forward momentum, helping mixed text feel cohesive. At smaller sizes the thin connecting strokes may become subtle, while larger settings emphasize the expressive contrast and stroke energy.