Script Kobez 2 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, monograms, packaging, elegant, formal, romantic, classic, ceremonial, calligraphic emulation, elegant display, ceremonial tone, decorative capitals, swashy, calligraphic, flourished, ornate, refined.
A formal, slanted script with pronounced thick–thin modulation and crisp, tapered terminals. Letterforms show a calligraphic rhythm with long entry and exit strokes, occasional looped swashes, and hairline connectors that keep words flowing without becoming overly tangled. Uppercase characters are notably more embellished, featuring extended curves and decorative cross-strokes, while lowercase maintains a narrower, more streamlined cursive structure. Overall spacing reads airy and controlled, with a light touch in the joins and strong contrast that creates sparkling highlights in text.
Well-suited to short-to-medium settings where elegance is the priority, such as wedding suites, event stationery, luxury branding accents, product packaging, certificates, and headings. The ornate capitals and fine connectors make it especially effective for names, titles, and monogram-style compositions where decorative flourish is desirable.
The font conveys a polished, ceremonial tone—graceful and traditional, with a touch of romance. Its high-contrast strokes and sweeping capitals suggest formality and craftsmanship, evoking invitations, monograms, and classic engraved-style correspondence.
The design appears intended to emulate formal calligraphy with a disciplined baseline flow and high-contrast pen-like strokes, balancing ornate display capitals with more restrained lowercase for readable word shapes. It aims to deliver a classic, upscale script voice for refined editorial and ceremonial applications.
In continuous text the slant and contrast create a lively cadence, with capitals acting as visual anchors through larger swashes. Numerals follow the same italicized, calligraphic logic, reading as elegant figures rather than rigid tabular forms.