Cursive Foget 2 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, quotes, greeting cards, social posts, packaging accents, airy, casual, playful, personal, sketchy, handwritten charm, casual elegance, signature feel, light display, monoline, loopy, tall, spidery, open counters.
A slender, monoline handwritten script with a tall, compressed silhouette and a steady forward slant. Strokes feel pen-drawn and slightly irregular, with occasional looped entries/exits and lightly overshooting terminals that give the linework a spontaneous rhythm. Uppercase forms are narrow and elongated with simple construction, while lowercase shows restrained joining behavior and generous open counters in letters like a, e, and o. Ascenders are prominent and often looped (b, d, h, l), and descenders are long and whiplike (g, j, y), contributing to a high vertical emphasis. Numerals mirror the same thin, handwritten cadence, with simple, lightly curved forms and minimal ornamentation.
Best suited to short, expressive text where the tall, airy strokes can breathe—such as headlines, pull quotes, invitations, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It can also work as an accent face on packaging or branding touchpoints when paired with a simple sans for body copy. For longer passages, larger sizes and generous line spacing help maintain legibility.
The overall tone is breezy and informal, like quick neat handwriting in a notebook. Its light touch and tall loops read as friendly and slightly whimsical, with a relaxed, human cadence rather than polished calligraphy. The style suggests spontaneity and approachability, making it feel personal and conversational.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, stylish handwritten look—lightweight and compact, with expressive loops and a consistent forward motion. It prioritizes personality and a natural pen rhythm over strict uniformity, aiming for a personable signature-like presence in display settings.
Spacing appears intentionally loose in places to preserve the handwritten flow, and some letters rely on context for clarity (notably slender uppercase forms and minimal cross-strokes). The distinctive long crossbars and extended ascenders/descenders create an energetic line in headlines but can introduce collisions in tight leading.