Cursive Irmaf 10 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, signatures, elegant, romantic, personal, lively, airy, handwritten elegance, personal voice, signature look, display emphasis, monoline, slanted, looping, calligraphic, fluid.
A slender, slanted handwritten script with a mostly monoline stroke and gently tapered terminals. Letterforms are built from smooth, continuous curves and narrow oval bowls, with occasional long ascenders and descenders that add vertical sparkle without heavy weight changes. Uppercase shapes are simplified and open, leaning on sweeping entry/exit strokes and soft loops rather than strict formal construction. Spacing feels light and variable, emphasizing a natural rhythm over rigid alignment, and numerals follow the same quick, handwritten gesture.
This font suits display-led applications where a personal, elegant handwriting voice is desired—wedding stationery, invitations, signature-style branding, boutique packaging, and short pull quotes. It works best at moderate-to-large sizes where the slim strokes and tight counters remain clear, especially in simple layouts with ample whitespace.
The overall tone is graceful and intimate, like neat penmanship used for names and short notes. Its narrow, flowing strokes convey a refined, romantic feel while retaining an informal, human cadence. The lively slant and quick joins keep it energetic rather than formal.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, stylish pen writing: compact letterforms, a consistent slant, and smooth joins combine to create an expressive script suitable for names and emphasis text. It prioritizes graceful motion and a natural handwritten rhythm over strict typographic regularity.
Connectivity is intermittent: many lowercase letters link with subtle joins, while others break cleanly, which reinforces a spontaneous handwritten texture. The narrow proportions and tight internal counters give it a compact footprint, while extended strokes in capitals and select lowercase forms create expressive emphasis in headlines.