Cursive Komay 15 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, certificates, branding, logotypes, elegant, romantic, refined, airy, graceful, formal script, ornamental caps, signature feel, delicate tone, monoline, hairline, swashy, looping, calligraphic.
A delicate, hairline cursive with long, sweeping entry and exit strokes and a consistent rightward slant. Forms are narrow and tall with generous ascenders/descenders, and many capitals extend into prominent flourishes that set up a continuous rhythm across words. Stroke work feels lightly calligraphic: thin main lines with subtle thick–thin modulation on curves and turns, and frequent looping joins in the lowercase. Counters are open and oval, spacing is loose enough to keep the fine strokes from clogging, and the overall texture stays airy even in longer text lines.
Best suited for display settings where its fine strokes and sweeping capitals have room to breathe—wedding suites, invitations, formal announcements, certificates, and boutique branding. It can work for short phrases or headlines in editorial or packaging when paired with a simpler text face, but it benefits from larger sizes and careful spacing to preserve legibility.
The font reads as formal and expressive, with a polished, romantic tone reminiscent of handwritten invitations and ceremonial penmanship. Its light touch and extended swashes create a sense of grace and prestige, while the flowing connections keep it warm and personal rather than rigid.
Likely designed to emulate refined penmanship with an emphasis on graceful movement and ornamental capitals. The intent appears to prioritize elegance and continuity of stroke, creating a signature-like script that feels ceremonial and premium.
Capital letters carry much of the personality through extended lead-ins and high-contrast-looking stroke direction changes, so the face is most visually distinctive in title case and with ample tracking. The very small lowercase bodies and long descenders give lines a pronounced vertical swing, and the numerals follow the same slender, cursive logic for coordinated use in dates and short numeric strings.