Cursive Afmeg 10 is a very light, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, airy, romantic, whimsical, personal, graceful script, personal tone, premium feel, decorative display, monoline feel, hairline strokes, looping ascenders, open counters, calligraphic.
A delicate, flowing script with hairline strokes and pronounced slant, built from long, continuous curves and occasional tapered joins. Uppercase forms are tall and gestural, mixing open oval structures with extended entry/exit strokes and subtle cross-strokes, while the lowercase keeps a small body height with long ascenders and descenders that create a strong vertical rhythm. Letter spacing is relatively open for a script, improving separation between characters, and the overall texture stays light and refined with high clarity at larger sizes. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, leaning slightly and using simple, looped constructions.
Best suited to display use where its fine strokes and tall proportions can shine—wedding stationery, boutique branding, beauty and lifestyle packaging, social posts, and elegant headlines. For longer passages, it performs better as a short accent (names, quotes, or subheads) rather than continuous body text.
The font reads as intimate and refined, like quick, confident penmanship dressed up for invitations and headings. Its light touch and looping forms suggest romance and softness, while the crisp, high-contrast strokes keep it feeling polished rather than rustic.
Designed to capture the feel of graceful handwritten lettering with a refined, fashion-oriented finish—prioritizing expressive capitals, a light page color, and a smooth, flowing cadence for premium, personal-forward communication.
The design emphasizes height and movement: many glyphs feature extended terminals and narrow internal spaces, creating a tall, airy silhouette. Connections between letters are implied by entry/exit strokes, but the sample text remains legible because counters stay open and the rhythm is consistent across words.