Cursive Epmok 2 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, social media, packaging, logos, airy, casual, friendly, elegant, handmade, personal tone, modern script, signature look, decorative caps, display writing, monoline, looping, fluid, bouncy, tall ascenders.
A flowing handwritten script with a tall, slender build and a consistent, pen-like stroke. Forms are softly rounded with frequent loops and open apertures, giving the letters a light, buoyant rhythm. The slant is pronounced and the baseline feels gently bouncy, with ascenders and descenders stretching long and adding vertical elegance. Connection behavior is selective rather than fully continuous, so words read as cursive while individual letter shapes remain distinguishable.
Works well for invitations, greeting cards, and quotes where a personal, handwritten voice is desired. It also suits boutique packaging, beauty and lifestyle branding, and social media graphics, especially at headline sizes where the looping details and tall proportions can breathe. For best results, allow generous line spacing to accommodate the long ascenders and descenders.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like quick but careful handwriting in a fine pen. Its long strokes and looping capitals add a touch of romance and refinement without feeling formal or rigid. The impression is upbeat and approachable, suited to friendly messages and lifestyle-oriented branding.
Designed to emulate neat, contemporary cursive handwriting with an emphasis on tall proportions, fluid motion, and graceful capitals. The intent appears to balance quick handwritten authenticity with enough consistency for repeated use in branding and short-form display text.
Capitals are expressive and often constructed with single-stroke gestures and large entry/exit swashes, creating prominent word shapes at the start of lines. Lowercase maintains a narrow, upright footprint with occasional playful loops (notably in letters like g, y, and z). Numerals are simple and handwritten in spirit, matching the letterforms’ slender proportions.