Cursive Lomur 13 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, quotes, packaging, branding, friendly, breezy, casual elegance, romantic, approachable, personalization, warmth, expressiveness, informality, flair, tapered terminals, pen-like, looped capitals, swashy, fluid rhythm.
The letterforms are slanted with a consistent rightward motion and a smooth, pen-like rhythm. Strokes show subtle thick-to-thin modulation, with tapered entries, pointed terminals, and occasional looped bowls in capitals and descenders. Spacing and widths vary naturally across letters, creating an organic texture, while the overall construction remains clean and legible for a handwriting style.
This font suits invitations, greeting cards, quotes, social graphics, and lifestyle branding where a personal signature-like feel is desired. It can work well for short headlines, pull quotes, packaging callouts, and logo wordmarks, especially at medium to larger sizes where the delicate strokes and loops can breathe. For long text or very small sizes, the light strokes and compact proportions may reduce clarity, so it’s best used sparingly.
This script feels breezy and personable, with a casual elegance that suggests a quick, confident hand. Its gentle swells and sweeping endings give it a friendly, slightly romantic tone without becoming overly ornate. Overall it reads as relaxed and inviting rather than formal or rigid.
The design appears intended to emulate a neat, fast cursive note with just enough flourish to feel special. It balances flowing connections and expressive capitals with relatively simple structures so words stay readable. The result aims for a natural handwritten voice suitable for decorative, human-centric messaging.
Capitals are more expressive, with occasional large loops and long lead-in strokes that add personality at the start of words. Descenders (such as in g, j, y) extend with smooth curves, and the numerals follow the same handwritten logic with simple, slightly angular turns and tapered ends.