Cursive Oprit 14 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, wedding stationery, signature lines, branding accents, elegant, airy, romantic, delicate, personal, handwritten elegance, personal warmth, decorative display, signature feel, light touch, monoline, looping, calligraphic, slanted, whispy.
A slender, monoline cursive with a pronounced rightward slant and a light, pen-like stroke. Letterforms are built from long, continuous curves with minimal modulation, relying on sweeping entry and exit strokes rather than heavy joins. Uppercase characters are tall and open, often featuring extended cross-strokes and generous loops, while the lowercase maintains a small body with long ascenders/descenders that create a high, vertical rhythm. Spacing is generally open and the overall texture is thin and airy, with variable character widths that keep lines lively rather than rigidly uniform.
This style is well suited to short, display-oriented applications such as invitations, greeting cards, romantic headlines, and signature-style lockups. It can also work as an accent in branding and packaging where a light handwritten note is desired, provided there is sufficient size and whitespace for its long strokes and tight lowercase proportions.
The font communicates a graceful, intimate tone—more like quick, confident handwriting than formal engraving. Its fine line and looping forms feel romantic and refined, lending a soft, personal warmth while staying visually light and unobtrusive on the page.
The font appears designed to mimic a refined handwritten script with a delicate, continuous rhythm—prioritizing elegance and personal expression over dense text efficiency. Its tall capitals and extended terminals suggest an intention to create graceful emphasis in names, titles, and brief phrases.
The design leans on height and flourish for emphasis: capitals and certain numerals use elongated strokes that can extend into surrounding space. Because the lowercase is comparatively small, readability depends on adequate size and generous line spacing, especially in longer sentences.