Cursive Ulfy 10 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, quotes, casual, energetic, friendly, playful, expressive, handwritten feel, brush lettering, personal tone, dynamic motion, display impact, brushy, slanted, looping, bouncy, textured.
An expressive, brush-pen script with a consistent rightward slant and lively, variable stroke modulation. Letterforms show tapered entries and exits, occasional dry-brush texture, and a mix of rounded bowls with sharp, flicked terminals. Proportions are compact with small counters and a bouncy baseline feel; capitals are prominent and gestural, while lowercase forms favor quick curves and simplified joins that read like fast handwriting. Spacing is slightly irregular in a natural way, reinforcing an organic rhythm rather than strict geometric consistency.
Best suited to display applications such as logos, product packaging, invitations, pull quotes, headlines, and social graphics where a personable handwritten feel is desired. It can work for short-to-medium passages when set with generous line spacing, but its strongest performance is in titles and emphasis text where the brush texture and lively rhythm can be appreciated.
The overall tone feels informal and upbeat, like a confident handwritten note or marker-style signature. Its sweeping capitals and brisk stroke endings add a sense of motion and personality, leaning more conversational than formal.
Likely designed to capture the look of quick brush lettering—fluid, slightly textured, and naturally irregular—while staying cohesive across a full alphanumeric set. The intent reads as adding warmth and motion to contemporary layouts without the stiffness of a formal calligraphic script.
In longer text, the connected-flow impression is maintained even when some letters appear more loosely joined, creating a natural handwritten cadence. The high-contrast brush behavior and textured edges are most noticeable at larger sizes, where the stroke nuance reads as intentional pen pressure rather than mechanical uniformity.