Cursive Bilog 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, invitations, friendly, casual, playful, handmade, approachable, handwritten charm, casual voice, friendly display, brush script feel, brushy, rounded, looping, bouncy, monoline-ish.
A lively, handwritten script with a brush-pen feel and gently slanted construction. Strokes are smooth and rounded with modest thick–thin shifts, and terminals often finish in soft taps or tapered flicks. Letterforms show a bouncy rhythm and variable widths, with simplified joins in lowercase that suggest cursive continuity while still allowing occasional breaks between letters. Ascenders and descenders are prominent, giving the line a tall, airy silhouette, and the numerals follow the same informal, drawn character.
Well suited for short-to-medium display text where a human voice is desired: logos and small-brand wordmarks, product labels, café menus, greeting cards, invitations, and social graphics. It can also work for pull quotes or headings when set with comfortable tracking and adequate line spacing to accommodate the tall ascenders and descenders.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like quick hand lettering for notes, packaging, or social content. Its looping forms and buoyant spacing read as upbeat and informal, leaning more charming than formal. The slight irregularities reinforce an authentic, handmade feel without becoming messy.
Designed to capture casual brush-script handwriting with an easy, conversational flow. The intention appears to balance spontaneity and legibility—keeping forms consistent enough for clean rendering while preserving the natural bounce and looping gestures of hand lettering.
Uppercase letters are expressive and slightly decorative, functioning well as initials while staying compatible with the lowercase flow. The lowercase maintains clear, rounded counters and open shapes that help keep words readable at display sizes. The figures are simple and friendly, matching the script’s rhythm rather than appearing strictly tabular or geometric.