Script Bareh 2 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, whimsical, vintage, romantic, playful, calligraphic feel, decorative caps, personal tone, display impact, swashy, looping, calligraphic, monoline hairlines, bouncy baseline.
A high-contrast, calligraphy-inspired script with slim hairlines and fuller downstrokes, showing a hand-drawn rhythm and gentle irregularity. Letterforms are generally upright with a narrow overall footprint, but widths vary by glyph, creating a lively texture. Strokes terminate in rounded, ink-like ends and occasional teardrop joins, while many capitals and select lowercase letters feature pronounced entry/exit swashes and looped flourishes. The short x-height and tall ascenders/descenders amplify the verticality and give the text a refined, airy color at display sizes.
Best suited to display applications where its contrast and swashes can shine: wedding suites, greeting cards, boutique branding, product packaging, book covers, and short headlines. It can work for brief subheads or pull quotes, but the ornate capitals and delicate hairlines make it less ideal for dense body text or small UI sizes.
The font reads as elegant and romantic with a lightly playful, storybook tone. Its looping swashes and buoyant cadence suggest a crafted, personal voice—polished enough for formal moments, but still warm and approachable.
The design appears intended to mimic formal hand-lettering with calligraphic contrast and decorative swashes, offering a refined script look with enough irregularity to feel handwritten. It prioritizes expressive capitals and a flowing, ornamental presence for premium, celebratory, or boutique contexts.
Capitals are especially decorative, with several incorporating extended loops and cross-strokes that act as built-in ornamentation. Numerals echo the same contrast and curving stroke logic, with a few figures featuring conspicuous curls that make them feel more display-oriented than utilitarian. Overall spacing appears moderately open for a script, helping maintain clarity despite the flourishes.