Cursive Efloy 3 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social media, posters, invitations, casual, friendly, lively, playful, handmade, handwritten feel, expressive display, casual branding, personal tone, brushy, fluid, bouncy, looping, slanted.
A lively brush-script with a pronounced forward slant and a smooth, continuous rhythm. Strokes show modest pressure variation with rounded terminals and occasional tapering, creating a natural handwritten texture without looking rough. Uppercase forms are expressive and slightly oversized, while the lowercase is compact with a notably low x-height and long, swinging ascenders/descenders that add movement. Letterforms vary in width and spacing in a deliberate, handwritten way, and many shapes feature open bowls and loose joins that keep counters readable at display sizes.
Well-suited to logos, product packaging, and promotional headlines where a handcrafted voice is desired. It works especially well for social posts, quotes, invitations, and casual editorial callouts, and is most effective at medium-to-large sizes where the low x-height and brush detail remain clear.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a quick, confident handwriting feel. It reads as upbeat and approachable rather than formal, bringing a sense of spontaneity and human warmth to short messages and headlines.
The design appears intended to emulate quick brush-pen handwriting with a consistent slant and energetic cadence, balancing expressive capitals with a flowing, compact lowercase. It aims to deliver a friendly, contemporary script look that feels personal and informal while staying legible for short bursts of text.
Capitals have distinctive, signature-like silhouettes and can dominate a line, while the lowercase maintains a consistent baseline flow. Numerals follow the same script logic, with simplified, fast-drawn shapes that match the alphabet’s rhythm. The strong slant and compact lowercase mean generous line spacing helps avoid collisions in tight multi-line settings.