Script Abrom 10 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, social media, elegant, whimsical, handcrafted, charming, inviting, modern calligraphy, personal tone, display elegance, hand-lettered feel, brushy, looped, monoline-ish, tall ascenders, soft terminals.
A tall, handwritten script with a lively brush-pen rhythm and pronounced contrast between thick downstrokes and hairline upstrokes. Letterforms are mostly upright with narrow proportions, long ascenders and descenders, and frequent looped entries/exits that create a flowing line in text. Strokes end in soft, tapered terminals, and the overall spacing feels airy, with forms that alternate between compact joins and occasional open counters for sparkle. Capitals are simplified but expressive, using slender stems and gentle swashes rather than heavy ornamentation.
This style performs best in short-to-medium display settings such as invitations, greeting cards, boutique branding, packaging labels, and social media graphics. The high-contrast strokes and narrow build make it particularly effective for elegant headlines and nameplates where the looping forms can be appreciated at larger sizes.
The font conveys a friendly, boutique elegance—polished enough for refined headings while still retaining a casual, personal touch. Its tall, looping gestures and brushy modulation create a romantic, slightly playful tone suited to warm, personable messaging.
The design appears intended to emulate modern brush calligraphy in a clean, controlled way: tall, narrow forms with graceful loops and tapered endings that read as hand-drawn while remaining consistent across the alphabet. It targets expressive display typography that adds personality and a crafted feel to contemporary design work.
In running text the connections appear selective rather than strictly continuous, producing a hand-lettered texture with varied joins and natural-looking irregularities. Numerals and capitals maintain the same calligraphic modulation, keeping the set visually cohesive across mixed-case compositions.