Script Egneh 12 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, packaging, invitations, greeting cards, playful, whimsical, vintage, friendly, handcrafted, handmade feel, decorative display, friendly tone, vintage charm, curling terminals, soft curves, bouncy rhythm, rounded forms, looped ascenders.
A lively, handwritten script with a bouncy baseline and gently irregular rhythm that keeps it feeling drawn rather than mechanically constructed. Strokes show clear contrast between thicker stems and thinner connecting curves, with rounded joins and frequent curled terminals. Letterforms are generally upright and compact, with relatively tall ascenders/descenders compared to the lowercase body, and a mix of connected and unconnected behavior depending on the glyph. Numerals and capitals carry the same soft, curling finish, reading cleanly while keeping an ornamental, pen-like character.
Works best for short to medium-length display settings where its curls and contrast can be appreciated—logos, product names, café menus, packaging callouts, invitations, and greeting cards. It also performs well for pull quotes or headers where a friendly, handcrafted accent is needed, rather than for long-form paragraphs.
The overall tone is cheerful and personable, with a storybook or mid-century boutique feel. Its curls and soft modulation suggest warmth and approachability, leaning more playful than formal despite the script influence. The font communicates a handmade charm suited to lighthearted, welcoming messages.
Designed to deliver a handcrafted script look that balances readability with decorative charm. The intention appears to be an approachable, vintage-leaning display face with expressive capitals and gently animated lowercase forms for upbeat branding and titling.
Capitals are especially decorative, featuring prominent swashes and inward curls that create strong word-shapes and a touch of flourish. Lowercase forms stay relatively simple but retain distinctive looped details (notably on letters like g, j, y), which increases character while slightly raising the visual texture in dense text.