Cursive Efrez 7 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, branding, packaging, posters, casual, friendly, handmade, lively, expressive, handwritten feel, personal voice, modern casual, brush expression, friendly branding, brushy, slanted, rounded, bouncy, textured.
A slanted, brush-pen script with smooth, rounded stroke endings and subtle tapering that suggests pressure changes. Letterforms lean forward with a bouncy baseline rhythm and varied joins—some characters connect fluidly while others break cleanly, reinforcing a natural handwritten cadence. Counters are generally open and simplified, with compact lowercase proportions and tall ascenders/descenders that create a vertical, energetic silhouette. The numerals and capitals share the same brisk, calligraphic construction, keeping the set visually consistent across display lines.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text such as headlines, logos, product names, quotes, packaging callouts, and promotional graphics where a personable handwritten voice is desired. It can also work for social media creatives and invitations when used at comfortable sizes with adequate spacing, allowing the brushy strokes and lively rhythm to remain clear.
The overall tone feels warm and personal, like quick confident handwriting used for notes, packaging, or social messaging. Its lively slant and brushy texture convey spontaneity and approachability rather than formality. The rhythm reads modern-casual, with enough polish to feel intentionally designed while still retaining an imperfect, human touch.
The design intent reads as a contemporary brush-script meant to capture the speed and charm of real handwriting while maintaining consistent construction across the alphabet and numerals. It prioritizes expressive motion and friendliness, offering a casual signature-like feel that stands out in branding and display settings.
Spacing appears intentionally loose in places to preserve the handwritten flow, especially around narrower letters, and long strokes (notably in capitals and ascenders) add flourish without becoming overly ornate. The shapes favor legibility through open forms and clear directional strokes, while still embracing the variability typical of marker or brush writing.