Cursive Urlaw 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, social media, packaging, branding, headlines, casual, energetic, expressive, friendly, playful, hand-lettered feel, brush texture, casual display, lively emphasis, modern script, brushy, textured, slanted, looping, bouncy.
A lively, brush-pen script with a pronounced rightward slant and visibly textured strokes that mimic dry-brush drag and ink buildup. Letterforms mix smooth curves with sharp, tapered terminals, producing strong thick–thin modulation and a rhythmic, handwritten bounce. Shapes are mostly semi-connected in words, with frequent joins and occasional breaks that preserve an organic, drawn-by-hand feel. Capitals are bold and gestural, while lowercase forms are compact and looping, with tall ascenders and relatively small counters that increase density in longer lines.
Best suited to display settings where its textured brush strokes and animated rhythm can be appreciated—posters, social graphics, product packaging, and brand accents. It works well for short headlines, pull quotes, and logo-like wordmarks, and is less ideal for long body text where the dense texture and compact forms may fatigue readability.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with an energetic, slightly rugged brush texture that reads as spontaneous and human. It feels modern and upbeat rather than formal, leaning toward a crafty, expressive voice suited to attention-grabbing headlines.
Designed to capture the immediacy of hand-lettered brush writing in a consistent, usable script, balancing expressive texture with enough regularity to set complete phrases. The emphasis is on personality and motion—tapered entries/exits, looping forms, and a lively baseline—to create an eye-catching handwritten voice.
Texture is a defining feature: many strokes show internal streaking and uneven edges, which adds character but can reduce crispness at very small sizes. Numerals and punctuation follow the same brushy, handwritten logic, keeping the set visually cohesive in display use.