Script Segi 13 is a very light, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding invites, beauty branding, editorial titles, packaging, greeting cards, elegant, delicate, romantic, refined, airy, formal elegance, decorative titling, signature look, stationery, hairline, swashy, looping, calligraphic, monoline-like.
A delicate formal script built from hairline curves and steep contrast between whisper-thin entry strokes and occasional heavier downstrokes. Letterforms are tall and slender with ample ascenders/descenders, frequent loops, and long, sweeping terminals that create an airy rhythm. Connections are intermittent rather than continuously joined, with many characters starting from fine lead-ins and finishing in extended exit strokes. Uppercase forms are highly flourished and ornate, while lowercase remains narrow and rhythmic with compact counters and a relatively small x-height.
Best suited to display settings where its flourishes and high contrast can breathe—wedding invitations, beauty and lifestyle branding, editorial headlines, packaging accents, and greeting cards. It can work for short phrases, names, or logos, especially when paired with a restrained serif or sans for supporting text.
The overall tone is graceful and intimate, evoking wedding stationery, fashion titling, and classic handwritten correspondence. Its light touch and extended swashes feel decorative and premium, with a soft, romantic formality rather than casual friendliness.
The design appears intended to deliver a formal, calligraphy-inspired signature style with pronounced elegance: tall proportions, ornamental capitals, and flowing terminals that prioritize sophistication and personality over dense text efficiency.
Spacing and width vary noticeably across glyphs, and several capitals use large entry loops that can occupy significant horizontal space. Numerals follow the same calligraphic logic, with slender curves and a slightly ornamental, oldstyle-leaning feel. The finest strokes are extremely light, so the design reads best when given room and sufficient size/contrast.