Script Wobas 11 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, wedding stationery, branding, packaging accents, friendly, elegant, personal, classic, romantic, readable script, polished handwriting, graceful tone, brand warmth, decorative caps, monoline, rounded, smooth, flowing, looping capitals.
The design is a smooth, cursive script with a consistent rightward slant and rounded forms. Strokes read as monoline with soft terminals, and the overall rhythm is even and flowing without heavy pressure changes. Capitals are slightly more embellished with looping entrances and exits, while lowercase remains tidy and compact, producing a neat, continuous texture in text. Numerals and punctuation follow the same handwritten logic, with curved strokes and modest swashes that keep the set cohesive.
It suits invitations, greeting cards, thank-you notes, and event materials where a personal, formal-leaning script is desired. It can also work for boutique branding, packaging accents, quotes, and social graphics, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the loops and joins stay clear. For longer text, it is best used selectively (headlines, short phrases, captions) to preserve legibility and avoid visual fatigue.
This script feels warm, personable, and quietly elegant, with a calm, courteous tone rather than high-drama calligraphy. Its gentle slant and restrained flourishes give it a friendly, classic sensibility suited to tasteful, human communication.
This font appears designed to mimic refined everyday handwriting—more polished than casual, but not overly ornate—balancing charm with readability. The restrained contrast and consistent rhythm suggest an intention to work in short passages and titling while maintaining a coherent handwritten feel across letters and numbers.
The sample text shows stable joins and consistent spacing, giving lines a smooth, continuous cadence. Uppercase forms add flourish without dominating the line, and the numerals echo the same rounded, handwritten construction for cohesive mixed-content settings.