Script Eldeh 7 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, packaging, invitations, headlines, posters, elegant, vintage, romantic, playful, confident, decorative script, shaded calligraphy, swash capitals, display impact, classic flavor, swashy, rounded, looping, connected, flourished.
A slanted, connected script with rounded bowls and pronounced entry/exit strokes that create a steady forward rhythm. Strokes show strong thick–thin modulation, with bold shaded downstrokes and finer connecting hairlines, giving the forms a glossy, calligraphic presence. Capitals are notably swashy with generous curves and teardrop-like terminals, while lowercase maintains a smooth, continuous join and compact counters. Overall proportions favor large, weighty forms and tight internal spaces, producing dense, high-impact words that read as a unified gesture rather than discrete letters.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where the bold shading and flourishes can shine—logotypes, brand marks, packaging labels, invitations, and prominent headlines. It can work for pull quotes or subheads when ample size and spacing are available; at small sizes the dense joins and tight counters may reduce clarity.
The tone is formal yet lively—equal parts classic and charismatic. Its decorative capitals and assertive shading evoke a vintage, celebratory feel suited to expressive, attention-seeking typography rather than quiet utility. The overall impression is warm, polished, and slightly theatrical.
The font appears designed to deliver a classic shaded-script look with strong contrast and decorative swash capitals, prioritizing visual character and momentum in connected writing. Its letterforms aim for a smooth, continuous flow with a polished, retro-leaning elegance for display typography.
The design leans on consistent cursive connections, with occasional extended terminal strokes that add flourish at word endings. Numerals follow the same italicized, calligraphic logic, appearing stylized and display-oriented rather than strictly utilitarian.