Cursive Rareg 12 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, packaging, quotes, social posts, invitations, casual, friendly, playful, handmade, airy, hand-lettered look, friendly branding, display emphasis, modern script, brushy, looping, upright slant, monoline feel, soft terminals.
A lively handwritten script with a consistent rightward slant and brisk, brush-like stroke rhythm. Letterforms are tall and slender with compact counters, giving the design a narrow, vertical profile. Strokes show pronounced pressure contrast—thicker downstrokes paired with finer hairline connections—while terminals stay rounded and slightly tapered, keeping edges soft. The alphabet mixes partial connections and lifted strokes, producing a natural hand-drawn cadence rather than continuous joining, and the numerals echo the same flowing, slightly elastic structure.
Well suited to short display lines where a warm, hand-lettered feel is desired—logos, packaging labels, quote graphics, social media headers, and casual invitations. It can also work for emphasized pull quotes or product names when paired with a simpler text face for supporting copy.
The font reads as relaxed and personable, with an upbeat, conversational tone. Its looping forms and bouncy baseline feel informal and approachable, suggesting quick handwritten notes, modern craft branding, and friendly signage rather than formal calligraphy.
Likely designed to capture a modern brush-pen handwriting look that feels spontaneous yet controlled. The goal appears to be a stylish, readable script with enough contrast and character to stand out in branding and headline settings without looking overly formal.
Capitals are expressive and varied, often starting with a tall entry stroke and finishing with a curved exit, which adds personality in headings. Lowercase shapes maintain an even rhythm and stay relatively open for a script style, while descenders are long and smooth, contributing to an elegant vertical flow. Overall spacing appears tight-to-moderate, supporting compact word shapes in display use.