Cursive Oskep 2 is a very light, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, logos, packaging, wedding, invitations, airy, elegant, whimsical, romantic, delicate, handwritten elegance, display script, personal tone, decorative caps, monoline, looping, tall ascenders, long descenders, spacious.
This script features slender, high-contrast strokes with a pronounced rightward slant and a tall, narrow skeleton. Letterforms are built from smooth, continuous curves with frequent looped entries and exits, producing long ascenders and descenders and a lively vertical rhythm. Connections are optional rather than strictly continuous, so spacing and joins feel calligraphic and flowing without becoming dense. Overall proportions skew tall and graceful, with small interior counters and generous white space around each character.
Well suited to branding elements that benefit from a graceful handwritten accent—logotypes, product packaging, and boutique labels. It also fits wedding and event materials, greeting cards, and short editorial pull quotes where expressive capitals and flowing rhythm can shine. For best results, use at display sizes and pair with a simple serif or sans for supporting text.
The font conveys a light, refined handwritten personality with a gentle sense of movement. Its looping forms and elongated verticals feel romantic and slightly playful, leaning toward a boutique, personal-note tone rather than formal stationery. The overall impression is polished but intimate, like careful penmanship.
The design appears intended to capture an elegant pen-written script with dramatic vertical proportions and refined, minimal stroke weight. Its emphasis on stylish capitals, looping joins, and generous spacing suggests a display script meant to add personality and sophistication in short phrases and titles.
Capitals are especially prominent and decorative, with extended strokes that can create distinctive word shapes and strong initial-letter emphasis. Numerals follow the same airy, handwritten logic and remain visually consistent with the alphabet. The thin hairlines suggest it will read best when not placed over busy backgrounds or at extremely small sizes.