Script Purag 3 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, packaging, invitations, editorial, elegant, playful, whimsical, vintage, romantic, decorative, expressiveness, calligraphic flair, vintage tone, headline impact, flourished, calligraphic, swashy, monoline hairlines, inked.
A high-contrast script face with narrow proportions and a distinctly calligraphic stroke model: bulbous, ink-rich main strokes paired with extremely fine hairlines. Letterforms show a lively, hand-drawn rhythm with frequent entry/exit strokes, occasional looped terminals, and selective joining behavior that reads as script in text while keeping individual shapes clear. Uppercase forms lean toward display-like silhouettes with tall verticals and dramatic swashes, while lowercase has a compact x-height and long ascenders/descenders that create strong vertical movement. Numerals and punctuation follow the same contrast and flourish logic, with several characters featuring thin cross-strokes and delicate finishing flicks.
Best suited to display settings such as branding wordmarks, packaging labels, invitations, and editorial headlines where its contrast and swashes have room to breathe. It can work for short subheads or pull quotes, but extended body text may feel busy due to the compact x-height and long vertical strokes.
The overall tone is refined but spirited—suggesting boutique elegance rather than strict formality. Its dramatic contrast and looping strokes evoke a vintage, romantic feel, with enough quirky, handwritten variation to keep it personable and expressive.
The design appears intended to deliver a decorative, calligraphy-inspired script that balances elegance with a hand-rendered, characterful cadence. It prioritizes visual flair—through contrast, swashes, and looping terminals—over utilitarian text neutrality.
Spacing appears intentionally tight and narrow, helping words form a continuous texture in larger sizes, while the extreme hairlines can visually disappear at small sizes or on low-resolution output. The capital set is especially distinctive and ornamental, making initial letters and short headlines feel prominent.