Script Tirim 6 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, greeting cards, elegant, vintage, friendly, refined, inviting, handwritten elegance, classic appeal, decorative titles, warm branding, celebratory tone, flowing, looped, calligraphic, rounded, lively.
A flowing script with a consistent rightward slant and smooth, brush-like curves. Strokes show gentle contrast with rounded terminals and frequent entry/exit swashes, creating a continuous rhythm across words. Capitals are larger and more decorative, featuring open loops and soft flourishes, while lowercase forms stay compact with a relatively low x-height and tall ascenders/descenders that add vertical elegance. Overall spacing is moderately loose for a script, keeping letterforms readable while preserving a handwritten cadence.
Well-suited to invitations, greeting cards, and event materials where an elegant handwritten look is desired. It also works for boutique branding, packaging, and short headlines that benefit from expressive capitals and fluid connections. For longer passages, it performs best at comfortable sizes with sufficient line spacing to accommodate ascenders, descenders, and swashes.
The font conveys a polished, personable tone—formal enough for classic stationery, but relaxed and friendly due to its rounded joins and buoyant curves. Its vintage-leaning letterforms and graceful swashes suggest celebration, tradition, and a touch of romance without feeling overly ornate.
Designed to emulate neat, formal handwriting with a calligraphic sensibility—balancing decorative capitals and smooth connectivity with an overall legible, consistent rhythm. The intent appears to be a versatile script that feels celebratory and classic while remaining approachable in everyday display use.
Numerals follow the same cursive logic, with curved strokes and occasional swashed starts/finishes that help them blend into text settings. In longer samples, the steady slant and consistent connections support smooth word shapes, though the more flourished capitals naturally draw attention in title case.