Cursive Urriz 4 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, headlines, social media, expressive, stylish, energetic, personal, romantic, signature feel, handmade texture, display impact, expressive writing, brushy, slanted, tapered, calligraphic, dynamic.
A slanted cursive script with brush-pen character and pronounced stroke modulation. Letterforms are built from quick, tapered strokes that thicken through curves and downstrokes, leaving sharp entry/exit points and occasional dry-brush texture. Spacing is compact and the rhythm is fast, with many characters suggesting connective motion even when not fully joined. Capitals are larger and more gestural, while lowercase forms stay relatively small and angular, emphasizing speed and direction over roundness.
Best suited for display applications such as logos, branding accents, packaging, posters, album or event titling, and social media graphics where a handwritten signature feel is desirable. It works well for short phrases, pull quotes, and punchy headlines; longer text is more effective with generous size and spacing so the lively strokes remain legible.
The overall tone feels bold, spontaneous, and fashion-forward—like a confident handwritten signature. Its brisk, streaked strokes read as lively and human, bringing an informal elegance that can feel both romantic and edgy depending on setting. The texture and contrast add a sense of momentum and personality rather than polished formality.
The design appears intended to capture a fast, brush-written script that reads as personal and expressive, with dramatic stroke contrast and sharp tapering to mimic a real pen or brush. The overall construction prioritizes gesture and flair, making it ideal as a distinctive voice layer in a typographic system rather than a neutral workhorse.
At smaller sizes the thin hairlines and sharp terminals may soften or fill depending on rendering, while larger sizes better reveal the brush texture and contrast. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with angled forms and variable stroke widths, matching the script’s forward-leaning cadence.