Script Agrel 15 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, craft branding, packaging, quotes, whimsical, handmade, airy, playful, delicate, personal tone, decorative script, casual elegance, display use, monoline feel, loopy, bouncy, curly terminals, open counters.
A slim, handwritten script with gently irregular rhythm and a mostly single-stroke feel, punctuated by occasional thicker downstrokes and tapered joins. Forms are tall and narrow with rounded shoulders, soft curves, and frequent looped entrances and exits that suggest cursive motion even when letters are not fully connected. Terminals tend to curl or hook, ascenders are prominent, and bowls stay relatively open, giving the face a light, spacious color on the page. Numerals and capitals carry the same wiry, looping construction, with a few decorative swashes and simplified strokes that keep the texture consistent across lines.
Well-suited to short to medium lines such as invitations, greeting cards, product packaging, boutique branding, and pull quotes where a handwritten voice is desirable. It can also work for headings and signatures, especially at moderate-to-large sizes where the fine strokes and curled terminals stay crisp.
The overall tone is informal and charming, with a breezy, personal character that reads as friendly rather than formal. Its looping details and buoyant proportions lend a storybook, boutique feel—more expressive and conversational than authoritative.
The design appears intended to capture a neat, hand-drawn cursive look with decorative loops and a light touch, balancing legibility with an expressive, personal rhythm. The narrow, vertical emphasis and lively terminals suggest a focus on elegant informality for display-oriented text.
Spacing appears intentionally loose to accommodate the long entry/exit strokes, helping words maintain clarity despite the narrow letterforms. In the sample text, the font performs best when given room to breathe, where the slender strokes and curls can remain distinct.