Cursive Biliz 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social media, posters, greeting cards, friendly, casual, lively, personal, playful, handwritten feel, casual warmth, expressive script, display voice, friendly branding, brushy, looping, slanted, fluid, bouncy.
A flowing cursive with a consistent rightward slant and brush-pen modulation. Strokes show smooth entry and exit terminals, with occasional tapered beginnings and fuller downstrokes that create a gently calligraphic rhythm. Letterforms are compact and slightly tall in feel, with rounded bowls, looping joins, and softly animated baselines that keep the texture lively rather than mechanical. Capitals are more decorative and open, while lowercase forms maintain an easy, continuous movement with clear internal spaces and moderate stroke contrast.
Well-suited to short-to-medium display settings where a personal, handwritten voice is desired—logos, boutique packaging, invitations, greeting cards, and social graphics. It can also work for headings or pull quotes when paired with a calmer text face, letting the script carry emphasis without overwhelming a layout.
The overall tone is warm and informal, like quick, confident handwriting used for notes or personal messages. Its smooth curves and buoyant pacing give it a cheerful, approachable character, with just enough polish to feel intentional rather than messy.
Likely drawn to mimic a natural brush-script handwriting style with a consistent slant, smooth connectivity, and a slightly polished finish. The goal appears to balance expressiveness and legibility, providing a casual signature-like texture that still holds together in sentence-length samples.
The design keeps a steady cursive connection feel in text while still allowing individual letters to read cleanly, especially in the sample sentences. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with rounded shapes and simple, gestural construction, matching the script’s rhythm. The slant and looping terminals are prominent visual signatures, giving words a cohesive forward motion.