Cursive Etbab 2 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, airy, romantic, graceful, whimsical, delicate, signature, elegance, flourish, personal tone, display, monoline, looping, swashy, slanted, tall ascenders.
A delicate, calligraphic cursive with a pronounced rightward slant and very fine hairline strokes. Letterforms are tall and streamlined, with narrow proportions and generous internal whitespace; many capitals use long entry/exit strokes and occasional baseline-reaching swashes. Curves are smooth and loop-driven, while joins are minimal—lowercase often reads as lightly connected or near-connected script rather than fully continuous. The overall rhythm feels quick and gestural, with subtle stroke modulation and crisp, tapered terminals that reinforce a pen-written character.
Best suited to display settings where its fine strokes and swashy capitals can breathe: wedding stationery, invitations, boutique branding, beauty/lifestyle packaging, and short headline treatments. It can also work for signature-style logos or quote graphics when set at comfortable sizes with ample spacing.
The font conveys an elegant, airy charm—more poetic than formal—balancing refinement with a playful, handwritten spontaneity. Its long loops and sweeping capitals add a romantic, signature-like tone that feels personal and expressive.
The design appears intended to capture a refined handwritten signature look—light, fast, and graceful—prioritizing elegance and expressive capital forms over dense text economy. Its tall proportions and looping strokes suggest a focus on decorative, romantic messaging and standout title lines.
Uppercase characters are especially decorative and tall, creating a strong headline presence and a lively contrast with the small, compact lowercase. Numerals share the same slender, handwritten construction, with simple shapes and light, curving movement. The very small lowercase height relative to ascenders and capitals makes mixed-case text feel high-contrast in scale, with an emphasis on vertical flourish.