Script Kumon 11 is a light, normal width, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, headlines, branding, certificates, formal, elegant, romantic, ceremonial, classic, formal script, decorative caps, calligraphy mimic, luxury tone, invitation style, calligraphic, swash, flourished, slanted, delicate.
A refined calligraphic script with a pronounced forward slant and hairline-to-stroke transitions that create crisp, high-contrast letterforms. Strokes behave like a pointed-pen model: thin entry and exit strokes, thicker shaded downstrokes, and tapered terminals. Capitals are especially ornamental, featuring long lead-in swashes, looped bowls, and extended cross-strokes that sweep into adjacent space. Lowercase is more compact and rhythmic, with a relatively small x-height, narrow counters, and occasional entrance strokes that suggest connection even when letters appear set as separate forms. Overall spacing is airy, with glyph widths varying noticeably between compact lowercase and expansive capitals and swashes.
Best suited to display typography where its swashed capitals and fine hairlines can breathe—wedding suites, formal invitations, certificates, upscale packaging, and logo-style wordmarks. It works well for short headlines, names, and pull quotes, while longer paragraphs may require larger sizes and relaxed spacing for clarity.
The font conveys a poised, formal tone with a strong sense of tradition and ceremony. Its graceful curves and dramatic swashes add a romantic, invitation-like atmosphere, while the crisp contrast keeps the look polished and high-end rather than casual.
Designed to emulate formal penmanship with dramatic capital swashes and a refined, high-contrast stroke model. The emphasis appears to be on elegance and flourish for display settings, pairing compact, rhythmic lowercase with showpiece capitals that provide instant decorative impact.
In text, the slant and swashes create a lively diagonal flow, but long flourishes and delicate hairlines can dominate at smaller sizes or in tight line spacing. Capitals and certain letters with extended terminals benefit from extra sidebearing and generous margins to avoid collisions, especially in all-caps settings or short display phrases.