Script Kuman 7 is a regular weight, normal width, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding invites, formal invitations, branding, headlines, certificates, elegant, ornate, romantic, classic, ceremonial, formality, luxury, decoration, calligraphy, display, swashy, flourished, calligraphic, looped, refined.
A formal, calligraphy-driven script with pronounced slant and very high stroke contrast. Letterforms show thin hairlines paired with sharp, tapered thick strokes and pointed terminals, producing a crisp engraved-pen feel. Capitals are expansive and swashy, with long entry/exit strokes and generous loops that extend above and below the main body. Lowercase is narrower and more compact, with a short x-height, delicate counters, and frequent joining behavior that creates a continuous, rhythmic line in words. Numerals follow the same angled, high-contrast construction, with curved forms and occasional flourished starts or endings.
Well-suited to high-impact display settings such as wedding and event invitations, certificates, luxury branding, and editorial or packaging headlines. It performs especially well for initials, short phrases, and name-centric typography where the ornate capitals can lead and the connected lowercase can carry elegant word flow.
The overall tone is formal and refined, leaning toward romantic and ceremonial expression. Its sweeping capitals and hairline flourishes suggest invitation-style sophistication and a classic, premium mood rather than casual handwriting.
Designed to emulate formal penmanship with dramatic contrast and decorative swashes, prioritizing elegance and expressive letterforms over utilitarian text setting. The consistent slant, tapered terminals, and extended capital flourishes point to a display-oriented script meant to elevate ceremonial and premium contexts.
Spacing feels intentionally airy around many capitals to accommodate large swashes, while the connected lowercase forms create stronger word-shapes in running text. At smaller sizes, the hairlines and interior details may visually soften compared to the bold downstrokes, so it reads best when given room and contrast.