Cursive Eddor 2 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, social posts, packaging, quotes, casual, friendly, airy, personal, playful, human warmth, informal clarity, personal voice, everyday note, monoline, hand-drawn, rounded, loose, bouncy.
A slim, monoline handwritten script with a relaxed, lightly bouncing baseline and a mix of print-like capitals and more cursive lowercase. Strokes stay mostly even in thickness with rounded turns, soft terminals, and occasional looped entries/exits that suggest quick pen movement. Proportions are tall and compact, with small counters and a relatively tight rhythm that keeps words cohesive even when letters don’t fully connect. The overall texture is clean but intentionally imperfect, retaining subtle variation in stroke length and curvature typical of natural handwriting.
Well-suited for short to medium-length text where a personal, handwritten feel is desired, such as invitations, greeting cards, social media graphics, product tags, and packaging accents. It also works nicely for pull quotes, headings, and signature-style sign-offs where a light, friendly voice is the goal.
The font reads as informal and approachable, like a neat personal note or a quick label written with a fine pen. Its slender strokes and gentle loops give it a light, friendly tone without feeling overly decorative. The mix of tidy structure and hand-drawn quirks adds a conversational, human quality.
Designed to capture the spontaneity of neat everyday handwriting in a refined, readable form. The intent appears to balance casual charm with clarity, using monoline strokes, compact proportions, and restrained flourishes to stay versatile across a variety of informal display applications.
Capitals are simple and legible with minimal flourish, while lowercase forms introduce more gestural detail through loops (notably in letters like g, j, and y) and occasional extended ascenders/descenders. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, remaining clear and consistent with the alphabet’s stroke behavior.