Script Tirol 5 is a light, normal width, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, logotypes, packaging, headlines, elegant, whimsical, romantic, refined, vintage, display, flourish, signature, formality, expressiveness, calligraphic, swashy, looped, flowing, graceful.
A flowing calligraphic script with a pronounced rightward slant and high stroke modulation, shifting from hairline entry strokes to thicker downstrokes. Letterforms are narrow-to-moderate with a lively, variable rhythm and gently bouncing baselines in places. Capitals feature generous loops and occasional swash-like terminals, while lowercase forms are compact with very small x-height and long ascenders/descenders that add vertical flourish. Joins are mostly implied rather than fully continuous, producing a handwritten feel with consistent pen-angle logic and tapered endings.
Best suited to short-form display settings such as invitations, greeting cards, boutique branding, product packaging, and feature headlines where its loops and contrast can be appreciated. It performs especially well for names, titles, and signature-style lockups; for multi-line text, larger sizes and comfortable leading help maintain clarity around descenders and flourished capitals.
The overall tone is elegant and slightly playful, mixing formal calligraphy cues with a spontaneous handwritten looseness. Its looping capitals and thin-to-thick contrast give it a romantic, vintage-leaning character suited to expressive, personality-forward typography.
Designed to evoke a pen-written formal script with expressive capitals and a refined contrast profile, balancing decorative flourish with readable cursive construction. The compact lowercase and dramatic verticals suggest an emphasis on elegant, nameplate-style typography rather than body copy.
Numerals and punctuation follow the same pen-driven contrast and tapered terminals, keeping the texture cohesive in mixed content. The strongest visual emphasis comes from the ornate capitals and extended descenders (notably in letters like g, j, and y), which can create attractive interline interactions when line spacing is generous.