Script Wikah 10 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding invites, greeting cards, logo marks, boutique packaging, social quotes, elegant, whimsical, romantic, delicate, refined, formal elegance, decorative caps, signature feel, romantic display, monogramming, monoline, loopy, flourished, swashy, airy.
A delicate script with monoline-like strokes and smooth, continuous curves, punctuated by small entry/exit hooks and frequent looped terminals. Capitals are tall and ornate, built from large oval bowls and extended swashes that create strong vertical emphasis and generous ascenders/descenders. Lowercase forms are compact with a small interior counter rhythm, while connections are implied through calligraphic joins and flowing stroke direction rather than rigid linking. Spacing is open and light, and the overall texture reads airy and graceful, with occasional dramatic flourishes on letters like J, Q, and Y.
This style suits short, display-oriented text such as wedding suites, greeting cards, romantic headlines, monograms, and boutique or beauty branding. It performs best at larger sizes where the loops and swashes can breathe, and where decorative capitals can be used as emphasis without crowding surrounding text.
The font conveys a formal, romantic tone with a playful sparkle from its curls and looping terminals. It feels personal and hand-drawn yet polished, evoking invitations, keepsakes, and boutique branding where charm and elegance matter more than strict readability at small sizes.
The design appears intended to provide an elegant formal script with expressive, flourish-heavy capitals and a light, flowing rhythm for display use. Its restrained stroke weight and open spacing prioritize delicacy and charm, while the ornate uppercase set adds a ceremonial, signature-like character.
Numerals follow the same calligraphic logic, with curved strokes and occasional looped details that keep them consistent with the letterforms. The sample text shows a gentle, flowing baseline rhythm and a strong contrast between simple lowercase and highly decorative capitals, making initial letters especially prominent.