Script Puray 5 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, packaging, logos, social graphics, elegant, whimsical, romantic, handcrafted, lively, modern calligraphy, expressive display, personal tone, decorative branding, calligraphic, looping, swashy, rounded, bouncy.
A flowing handwritten script with tall ascenders, compact counters, and a noticeably petite x-height. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin modulation, with teardrop terminals and hairline entry/exit strokes that give the letters a brushed-pen feel. Letterforms alternate between softly rounded bowls and narrow, slightly compressed verticals, creating a lively rhythm across words. Capitals are decorative but readable, with occasional extended curves and looped details, while numerals and punctuation follow the same calligraphic contrast and tapered endings.
Well suited to display settings where personality and flourish are desirable—wedding materials, greeting cards, gift packaging, boutique logos, and social media graphics. It performs best at medium to large sizes where the hairlines and contrast remain clear, especially on clean, high-contrast backgrounds.
The overall tone is graceful and playful—polished enough for special-occasion work, yet informal enough to feel personal. Its looping forms and high-contrast strokes evoke invitations, boutique branding, and modern calligraphy aesthetics, with a light, buoyant energy in longer text.
The design appears aimed at mimicking modern calligraphy in a tidy, consistent digital form—combining expressive thick–thin strokes with approachable, rounded shapes for friendly legibility. Decorative capitals and buoyant lowercase proportions suggest an emphasis on charm and standout word shapes rather than dense text reading.
In the samples, connectivity appears selective: some letter pairs join naturally while others break with hairline transitions, reinforcing a hand-drawn cadence. Spacing is relatively tight in lowercase, and the tallest ascenders/descenders add a dramatic vertical profile that stands out in headlines and short phrases.