Script Bylat 14 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, logotypes, headlines, greeting cards, elegant, playful, romantic, vintage, whimsical, hand-lettered feel, decorative elegance, personal warmth, display emphasis, looped, swashy, calligraphic, brushed, bouncy.
A flowing, right-slanted script with pronounced thick–thin contrast and a brisk handwritten rhythm. Strokes alternate between hairline entry/exit lines and heavier downstrokes, with frequent loops, curled terminals, and occasional swash-like caps. Letterforms are compact in the lowercase with a relatively modest x-height, while ascenders and descenders are long and expressive, creating a lively vertical silhouette. The set shows slight variability in character widths and spacing, reinforcing an organic, penned feel while keeping forms consistent enough for reading in short lines.
This font performs best in display settings where its contrast and flourishes can breathe—wedding and event invitations, greeting cards, boutique packaging, and logo-style wordmarks. It also works well for short headlines or pull quotes, while long paragraphs or very small sizes may reduce clarity due to the delicate hairlines and compact lowercase proportions.
The overall tone is graceful and personable, balancing formality with a light, flirtatious energy. Its looping capitals and buoyant joins evoke invitations, boutique branding, and nostalgic stationery, giving text a warm, celebratory character rather than a strictly utilitarian one.
The design appears intended to emulate a polished hand-lettered script with calligraphic contrast—decorative enough to feel special, but structured enough to remain legible in typical branding and invitation uses.
Uppercase forms lean toward decorative initials, with exaggerated curves and occasional internal flourishes that draw attention at the start of words. Numerals follow the same calligraphic logic, mixing sturdy downstrokes with airy curves, making them better suited to display contexts than dense tables.