Script Egkek 14 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, greeting cards, branding, packaging, posters, friendly, playful, retro, casual, warm, approachability, hand-lettered feel, retro charm, display clarity, rounded, bouncy, looping, monoline-ish, upright-leaning.
A lively, handwritten script with softly rounded terminals and a buoyant baseline rhythm. Strokes keep a fairly even thickness with gentle swelling at curves, and letterforms lean slightly while maintaining clear, open counters. Connections are implied by flowing entry/exit strokes, but many characters read as clean, discrete forms rather than tightly joined calligraphy. Ascenders and descenders are long and loop-friendly, giving the alphabet a tall, airy silhouette and compact lowercase body.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its loops and bounce can be appreciated—headlines, logos, labels, and seasonal or celebratory messaging. It also works well for invitations and greeting-card copy where a friendly handwritten feel is desired, and for packaging or café-style signage that benefits from a warm, retro-leaning script.
The overall tone is personable and upbeat, with a nostalgic, soda-shop friendliness. Its smooth curves and generous loops suggest informal charm rather than ceremony, making it feel approachable and conversational. The rhythm is energetic without becoming chaotic, lending a cheerful, handcrafted voice.
The design appears intended to deliver an easygoing, hand-lettered script that stays readable while preserving a playful, looping character. It prioritizes smooth rhythm, rounded shapes, and approachable charm over formal calligraphic precision, aiming for versatile display use in personable branding and headline typography.
Capitals are simple and rounded, designed to blend with the lowercase rather than dominate it. Numerals are curvy and informal, matching the script’s soft terminals and maintaining consistent color in text. Spacing appears comfortably open in running copy, helping the loops and joins stay legible at display sizes.