Cursive Wohi 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, posters, packaging, social media, invitations, casual, energetic, personal, playful, expressive, handwritten feel, signature style, expressive display, casual messaging, brushy, loose, slanted, gestural, textured.
A lively, brush-pen script with a pronounced forward slant and narrow overall proportions. Strokes show medium contrast with tapered entries and exits, occasional thickened downstrokes, and slight texture from pressure changes, giving the forms a hand-drawn irregularity. Letterforms are compact with a notably low x-height, long ascending strokes in capitals, and rounded, open bowls; connections are suggested by continuous motion but remain loosely joined rather than strictly monoline or perfectly linked. Spacing and rhythm feel natural and variable, with a quick, sketch-like stroke behavior that keeps counters open and forms legible at display sizes.
Best suited for short to medium display text where personality matters: branding accents, headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and social graphics. It can also work for invitations or personal stationery, especially when paired with a quieter sans or serif for longer reading.
The font conveys an informal, human tone—like a quick note written with a felt-tip or brush pen. Its brisk slant and lively terminals add momentum, making the overall voice friendly, spontaneous, and slightly dramatic without becoming ornate.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, confident handwritten signature style—balancing expressive brush-like modulation with readable, modern shapes. Its narrow, slanted forms and compact lowercase suggest an emphasis on energetic headlines and personal, conversational messaging.
Capitals are tall and sweeping, lending strong entry points for names and short phrases, while lowercase forms stay compact and agile. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with simple, fast shapes that match the script’s rhythm rather than rigid lining figures.