Cursive Ehbih 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, logotypes, packaging, social media, invitations, casual, lively, personal, retro, friendly, handwritten feel, brush script, expressive display, compact headlines, brushy, looping, slanted, bouncy, calligraphic.
A slanted, brush-pen style script with rounded joins and tapered terminals that suggest quick, confident strokes. Letterforms lean forward with a lively baseline rhythm and variable stroke endings, mixing smooth curves with occasional sharp hooks and teardrop-like entries. Capitals are simplified and sweeping, while lowercase forms stay compact with tight counters and modest ascenders/descenders, creating an overall lean, economical silhouette. Numerals and punctuation match the same hand-drawn logic, with open shapes and softly flared starts and finishes.
Well suited to short display lines where personality matters—posters, headlines, product labels, and branding marks that want an approachable handwritten feel. It also works for invites, cards, and social graphics, especially when paired with a restrained sans or serif for body copy.
The font feels informal and human, like a fast handwritten note or a casual sign made with a marker. Its energetic slant and looping gestures add warmth and motion, giving text a friendly, conversational tone with a hint of vintage brush lettering.
Designed to emulate quick brush handwriting with a clean, repeatable rhythm: expressive enough to feel personal, but controlled enough for consistent word shapes in display settings. The narrow, slanted construction prioritizes punchy, compact headlines while maintaining a fluid cursive flow.
Stroke behavior remains consistent across the set, but individual letters show naturalistic variation in curvature and entry strokes, reinforcing a handwritten character. The spacing is relatively tight and the narrow footprint makes words stack into compact, dynamic lines; at small sizes the tighter interior spaces can feel busy, while larger settings show off the brush-like modulation more clearly.