Cursive Sulit 9 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, headlines, social media, energetic, expressive, casual, bold, playful, brush lettering, human warmth, bold impact, handmade texture, expressive voice, brushy, rough-edged, inky, textured, gestural.
A heavy, brush-like script with vigorous, slanted strokes and visibly textured edges that suggest a loaded marker or dry brush. Letterforms are loosely connected in running text, with strong modulation between thick downstrokes and finer turns, creating punchy contrast and a lively rhythm. Counters are often compact and partially pinched, and terminals end in blunt, slightly ragged cuts rather than clean, geometric finishes. Overall spacing feels hand-set and irregular in a controlled way, reinforcing the drawn character while staying readable at display sizes.
Best suited for short-to-medium display copy where its bold, textured stroke can be appreciated—posters, covers, product packaging, and energetic branding moments. It also works well for pull quotes, social graphics, and titles where a handmade, attention-grabbing voice is needed, while very small sizes or long passages may feel visually dense.
The font projects an assertive, handmade personality—confident, spontaneous, and a bit gritty. Its inky texture and quick, gestural movement give it a human, candid tone that feels informal and expressive rather than polished or corporate.
Designed to capture the immediacy of fast brush lettering with a strong, high-impact stroke, prioritizing expressive motion and authentic texture over precise regularity. The goal appears to be a confident handwritten look that stays cohesive across the alphabet while preserving natural variation.
Uppercase forms read like emphatic brush caps with simplified structures, while lowercase shapes lean more fluid and conversational, helping mixed-case text feel naturally handwritten. Numerals share the same bold, painted presence, with rounded shapes appearing more filled-in and darker than angular forms, which adds to the uneven, handcrafted color on the line.