+FRB American Cursive is an extremely technically complex cursive font family that consists of 50+ fonts. It is in the style of a "textbook hand", a font family used primarily for education. However, it can be used anywhere a cursive is called for. I call it an "American" cursive not out of any sense of patriotism, but out of a sense of the history of textbook hands: this font most heavily takes its design inspiration from Zaner–Bloser cursive. However, I also integrated elements of D'Nealian and Palmer Method. What this means is that FRB American Cursive is a traditional American textbook hand which puts a lot of emphasis on the idea that the writer should lift their hand from the page as seldom as possible. Using OpenType Layout, I made it so each glyph has at least 3 versions. Unlike many textbook hands, even educational ones, my font connects capital letters and lowercase letters. It connects some capital letters with eachother where possible as well.
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