Script Irmey 12 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: logo, packaging, greeting cards, social media, headlines, playful, friendly, whimsical, casual, retro, hand-lettered, decorative, approachable, expressive, brandable, monoline feel, looping, bouncy, rounded, brushlike.
A lively handwritten script with a right-leaning slant and a smooth, brush-pen rhythm. Strokes are rounded and softly tapered, with frequent entry/exit swashes and looped terminals that give letters a continuous, flowing motion even when set as separate glyphs. Capitals are large and decorative with prominent curves and occasional flourishes, while lowercase forms stay compact with short ascenders/descenders and simple, open counters. Overall spacing feels tight and organic, with an uneven, natural baseline and a hand-drawn consistency that favors charm over rigidity.
Best suited to short display settings where personality matters—logos, product packaging, invitations and greeting cards, quotes, and social media graphics. It can also work for subheads or pull quotes when set with generous size and breathing room so the loops and swashes remain clear.
The font reads as upbeat and personable, with a breezy, informal elegance. Its looping forms and buoyant movement suggest a cheerful, crafty tone—more friendly note-taking or boutique branding than formal correspondence. The overall feel is warm and slightly nostalgic, like a modern take on mid-century handwritten lettering.
The design appears intended to capture a polished hand-lettered look: expressive capitals, quick handwritten lowercase, and smooth brushlike curves that add charm and approachability. It prioritizes visual friendliness and decorative motion for branding and display rather than dense text typography.
Letterforms show a mix of print-like and cursive behaviors: some shapes appear loosely connected in spirit while remaining individually drawn, which helps it work in mixed-case display lines. Numerals are simple and rounded, matching the script’s soft terminals and maintaining an informal, handwritten character.