Script Jeji 14 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, logos, packaging, elegant, romantic, whimsical, vintage, friendly, signature look, formal flourish, display script, boutique branding, looping, flourished, calligraphic, monoline hairlines, swashy capitals.
A flowing script with a pronounced rightward slant and strong thick–thin modulation that mimics pointed-pen calligraphy. Strokes taper into fine hairlines and expand into weighty downstrokes, with frequent entry/exit curls and small terminal flicks. Capitals are tall and expressive with generous loops and occasional swashes, while lowercase forms are compact with a relatively modest x-height and rounded counters. Spacing and rhythm feel lively and slightly irregular in a natural handwritten way, yet the forms remain consistent and legible at display sizes.
Well suited to wedding suites, greeting cards, boutique branding, beauty and lifestyle packaging, and short headline treatments where its flourished capitals can shine. It also works nicely for signature-style logos and accent text paired with a simple serif or sans for longer reading.
The overall tone is graceful and celebratory, balancing refined calligraphic elegance with a light, personable charm. Flourishes and looping terminals give it a romantic, boutique feel suited to invitations and branded signatures, without becoming overly formal or rigid.
Designed to capture the look of formal, hand-drawn calligraphy with pronounced contrast and decorative loops, emphasizing expressive capitals and a graceful word rhythm. The intent appears to be a display-forward script that adds personality and ceremony to titles, names, and short phrases.
Several letters feature extended ascenders/descenders and decorative cross-strokes that create a distinctive silhouette in words. Numerals follow the same calligraphic contrast and slanted posture, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive. The busier capitals and thin connecting hairlines suggest it will read best with a bit of breathing room and at moderate-to-large sizes.