Script Lelin 8 is a light, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, logotypes, packaging, elegant, romantic, refined, classic, poetic, formal script, signature feel, decorative caps, luxury tone, stationery, calligraphic, swashy, flourished, slanted, looped.
A graceful, slanted script with smooth, continuous joining and pronounced entry/exit strokes. Letterforms show calligraphic construction with tapered terminals, delicate hairlines, and rounded loops, creating a lively stroke rhythm and consistent forward motion. Capitals are larger and more ornamental, featuring extended swashes and curved cross-strokes that stand out in headlines, while lowercase maintains a compact x-height with tall ascenders/descenders and frequent looped forms. Spacing is gently irregular in a natural handwritten way, with narrow connections and occasional long horizontal sweeps that add sparkle across a line of text.
Well-suited to wedding suites, event stationery, and upscale invitations where a refined script is expected. It also works for boutique branding, cosmetic or fragrance packaging, and short display lines such as product names, signatures, and logo wordmarks. For best results, use at display sizes and allow generous margins to accommodate the capitals’ swashes.
The overall tone is formal and romantic, evoking invitations, signatures, and traditional penmanship. Its flowing joins and airy contrast feel polished and personal, balancing sophistication with a lightly expressive, handwritten charm.
Designed to mimic elegant, practiced handwriting with a calligraphic pen influence, emphasizing flowing connectivity and decorative capitals. The intent appears focused on expressive display use—creating a luxurious, personal impression rather than dense, utilitarian text setting.
Many glyphs incorporate elongated ascenders and generous descenders that create an elegant vertical cadence, and several capitals rely on extended lead-in strokes that benefit from extra left-side room. The numerals follow the same cursive logic, with simple, slanted forms and subtle terminal flicks to keep them visually consistent in mixed settings.