Script Jobun 2 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, romantic, formal, refined, celebratory, formal script, luxury feel, invitation ready, brand polish, calligraphic, flourished, looped, swashy, delicate hairlines.
A slanted, calligraphic script with very high stroke contrast, combining fine hairlines with darker, swelling strokes. Letterforms show smooth, continuous curves, frequent entry/exit strokes, and looped details on select capitals and descenders. Spacing and rhythm are even and controlled, while the capitals add decorative presence without becoming overly ornate; numerals match the italic, high-contrast behavior and keep a similarly elegant silhouette.
Well-suited for wedding and event stationery, invitations, greeting cards, and refined packaging where an elegant script is desired. It can work effectively for logos, monograms, headlines, and pull quotes, especially at larger sizes where the thin hairlines and flourishes have room to breathe. For long body text, it will likely perform best sparingly as an accent due to its high contrast and expressive forms.
This script conveys a polished, celebratory tone with a classic, formal charm. Its flowing motion and delicate hairlines feel refined and romantic, leaning more toward invitations and luxury branding than casual note-taking. The overall impression is graceful and slightly theatrical, with a confident, calligraphic flourish.
The design appears intended to emulate a formal, pen-written script with the crisp contrast and tapered terminals associated with pointed-nib calligraphy. It prioritizes graceful movement and decorative capitals while keeping the lowercase relatively consistent for readable word shapes in short-to-medium settings.
The sample text suggests strong connectivity in many lowercase combinations, with occasional breaks typical of formal scripts to maintain clarity. Capitals provide distinctive, showy openings, and descenders (such as on g, y, and j) add a graceful vertical cadence that enhances the font’s ornamental rhythm.