Script Akrob 2 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, editorial accents, elegant, romantic, airy, refined, whimsical, elegance, formality, flourish, handwritten feel, display use, monoline feel, looping, flourished, calligraphic, upright-leaning.
A delicate, formal script with smooth, continuous strokes and a pronounced rightward slant. Letterforms are built from fine hairlines with occasional thicker downstrokes, producing a graceful, calligraphic rhythm and a lightly textured, hand-drawn finish. Capitals are tall and decorative with generous entry/exit strokes and looping bowls, while lowercase forms are compact with long ascenders/descenders and frequent connecting joins. Overall spacing is open, with narrow letter bodies and extended swashes that create a flowing horizontal movement across words.
Works best for short to medium display copy where its flourishes and fine strokes can be appreciated—wedding suites, greeting cards, beauty and boutique branding, labels, and headline accents. It’s particularly effective for names, titles, and quotes when set with comfortable tracking and ample line spacing to avoid tangling of loops and extended terminals.
The font conveys a polished, romantic tone with a soft sense of occasion. Its looping capitals and airy stroke weight feel intimate and handwritten, while the consistent slant and tidy joins keep it poised rather than casual. The overall impression is charming and upscale, suited to graceful, personal messaging.
Designed to emulate a refined, handwritten calligraphy style with decorative capitals and smooth joining behavior. The emphasis appears to be on elegance and flow—creating a legible script presence that still offers enough flourish for special-occasion and premium branding contexts.
Some capitals and numerals use prominent initial strokes and occasional swash-like terminals that can extend into neighboring space, making the texture more expressive in mixed-case settings. The numeral set appears similarly light and curvilinear, blending well with the script’s rhythm rather than reading as rigid lining figures.