Script Aglum 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, invitations, greeting cards, packaging, quotes, whimsical, elegant, airy, handmade, playful, handwritten charm, display elegance, signature feel, boutique branding, whimsical tone, monoline feel, calligraphic, looping, tall ascenders, spiky terminals.
A tall, slender hand-drawn script with a crisp, high-contrast stroke pattern and a mostly upright posture. Letterforms rely on narrow ovals, long vertical stems, and frequent looped ascenders/descenders, creating a light, wiry rhythm across words. Connections are selective rather than continuously cursive, and many strokes end in tapered, slightly spiky terminals that reinforce a pen-drawn character. The overall texture is open and vertical, with compact counters and a distinctly petite lowercase body relative to the extended ascenders.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings where its tall, delicate rhythm can be appreciated—such as invitations, greeting cards, boutique packaging, book or chapter titles, and pull quotes. It can also work for logo-like wordmarks when generous spacing and clean backgrounds help preserve the fine hairlines.
The font reads as refined but quirky—delicate, playful, and slightly storybook in tone. Its tall loops and thin hairlines give it a graceful presence, while the hand-rendered irregularities keep it personable and informal rather than strictly ceremonial.
The design appears intended to provide a stylish handwritten voice that feels personal and crafted while staying legible at display sizes. Its narrow proportions and looping extenders suggest an emphasis on elegant verticality and a distinctive, signature-like silhouette.
Capitals are especially narrow and linear, often built around a dominant vertical stroke with minimal lateral expansion, which helps keep headings tall and space-efficient. Numerals follow the same narrow, loop-friendly logic, with several figures formed from single, flowing strokes that echo the lowercase’s vertical emphasis.