Classic Script
Readable cursive Unicode for bios, names, and short lines.
ℐ 𝒾
cursive i + i in cursive
Compare uppercase I and lowercase i in cursive, copy either form, and download transparent PNG previews for Isla, idea, or your own text.
Use this visual guide to compare cursive I and i. Common reference cues include a tall, narrow capital that stays distinct from lowercase l for the capital and a short connected stem with a separate dot for the lowercase form; exact shapes vary by font and teaching system.
Quick answer
ℐ 𝒾
Downloads use a transparent background.
Copy a style or export it as a transparent PNG.
Readable cursive Unicode for bios, names, and short lines.
ℐ 𝒾
Heavier script style for stronger signatures and headings.
𝓘 𝓲
Light handwritten look that stays easy to read.
𝐼 𝑖
A stronger slanted style for short display text.
𝑰 𝒊
Clean cursive-adjacent style for modern profiles.
𝘐 𝘪
Decorative blackletter-style option for dramatic previews.
𝕴 𝖎
Old-world decorative lettering for dramatic name previews.
ℑ 𝔦
Airy script letters for elegant names and short previews.
ℐ 𝒾
These previews use real script fonts for visual comparison. Use the copyable styles above for Unicode text, or download a font preview as PNG.
Ii
Ii
Ii
Ii
Ii
Ii
Use these cues to compare the previews. They are not a verified stroke sequence, and published cursive systems may use different forms. See the methodology.
Try these words in the main generator if you want a full cursive word instead of a single letter.
These quick answers cover the common ways people ask about writing, making, and reading I in cursive script.
Start by comparing the uppercase and lowercase previews. A common reference cue for uppercase I is a tall, narrow capital that stays distinct from lowercase l; lowercase i may appear as a short connected stem with a separate dot. Published systems vary, so this is a visual comparison rather than a verified stroke sequence.
The page compares a capital that may use a tall, narrow capital that stays distinct from lowercase l with a lowercase form that may use a short connected stem with a separate dot. The exact outline can change across cursive systems and fonts.
Uppercase I is larger and works as a capital, while lowercase i is smaller and appears inside connected words. In the selected preview, check whether the dot remains above the short lowercase stem.
Avoid omitting the dot or stretching lowercase i until it resembles l. Compare several preview styles and choose the clearest form before adding decorative loops or flourishes.
Yes. Use the copy buttons for uppercase I, lowercase i, or the pair. Use PNG download when you need a fixed image instead of Unicode text. Practice words on this page include Isla, Isaac, Ivy, idea, inside, inspire.
Jump back to the A-Z chart or compare live cursive letter pages with copy and PNG export.
Tool
Generate cursive text to copy and paste, then download PNG.
Alphabet
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