Cursive Mydab 2 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, quotes, greeting cards, packaging, social media, friendly, casual, playful, handmade, airy, handwritten feel, personal tone, informal display, quick note, monoline, loopy, bouncy, tall ascenders, open forms.
A monoline handwritten script with a tall, slender build and generous vertical proportions. Strokes stay smooth and even, with rounded terminals and softly looped joins that suggest a continuous pen gesture, while still allowing many letters to stand as separate forms. Capitals are narrow and elongated, often simplified into single-stroke shapes, and the lowercase features high ascenders, compact bowls, and small, lightly marked counters. Figures are similarly narrow and curvy, keeping the same pen-drawn rhythm and spacing.
This font works best for short-to-medium text where a handwritten voice is desired: headlines, pull quotes, greeting cards, invitations, light branding, packaging callouts, and social posts. Its narrow, tall forms suit space-conscious layouts and stacked lines, while the airy monoline stroke keeps it from feeling heavy in display sizes.
The overall tone is friendly and informal, with a light, breezy rhythm that feels personal and approachable. Its looping strokes and narrow, upright stance give it a tidy but playful character, like quick neat handwriting used for notes, labels, and short messages.
The design appears intended to capture neat, everyday cursive with a streamlined, monoline pen feel—prioritizing a personable handwritten impression over strict typographic regularity. Its elongated proportions and looping joins aim to deliver a distinctive, readable script flavor for display-oriented use.
The alphabet shows consistent stroke weight and a steady baseline, but with natural hand-drawn variability in letter widths and join behavior. Long ascenders/descenders (notably in letters like f, g, j, y) create a distinctive vertical texture, and the capitals add a whimsical, signature-like flair when used in mixed-case settings.