Script Anmas 2 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, elegant, whimsical, romantic, crafty, friendly, celebration, personal touch, ornamentation, boutique feel, headline use, swashy, looped, calligraphic, delicate, bouncy.
A decorative script with a calligraphy-inspired stroke model: thin hairlines paired with fuller downstrokes and frequent teardrop terminals. Letterforms are compact and slightly bouncy, with narrow proportions and a relatively small x-height that emphasizes tall ascenders and deep descenders. Capitals are more expressive, featuring long entry/exit strokes and occasional extended swashes, while lowercase forms stay readable with open counters and rhythmic joins. The overall texture is lively and hand-drawn, with subtle variations in curve tension and stroke tapering that keep it from feeling mechanical.
Best suited for display contexts such as wedding suites, invitations, greeting cards, and romantic or boutique branding. It works well for logos, product labels, and packaging where a handcrafted flourish is desirable, and for short headlines or pull quotes where the swashes can be showcased without crowding.
The font conveys a polished, romantic charm with a playful, storybook energy. Its looping forms and light hairlines add a sense of delicacy, while the heavier downstrokes keep it confident and legible for display. The tone feels personal and celebratory—suited to designs that want warmth and a touch of flourish.
Likely designed to offer a refined handwritten script that balances ornamental capitals with a more restrained, readable lowercase. The aim appears to be a versatile, celebratory display face that brings calligraphic elegance to modern layouts while maintaining clear word shapes at typical headline sizes.
Spacing appears intentionally tight for a connected-script feel, with joins and terminals that encourage smooth word shapes. Numerals follow the same tapered, calligraphic logic and read as stylistically consistent with the letters, making them appropriate for short numeric accents rather than dense tabular settings.