Script Likik 6 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding invites, branding, packaging, editorial display, certificates, elegant, romantic, formal, vintage, refined, formal elegance, calligraphic feel, decorative capitals, romantic tone, looping, calligraphic, swashy, monoline accents, flourished.
A formal script with a pronounced rightward slant and high-contrast calligraphic stroke modulation. Letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented, with tapered hairlines, fuller downstrokes, and frequent entry/exit loops that create a continuous, flowing rhythm. Capitals are especially decorative, featuring generous swashes and curled terminals, while the lowercase is compact with a very small x-height and tall ascenders/descenders that add a delicate, airy texture. Numerals follow the same cursive logic, mixing slender strokes with rounded loops for a cohesive set.
Best suited for display applications where its flourished capitals and delicate stroke contrast can be appreciated—wedding and event stationery, beauty and boutique branding, product packaging, and short editorial headlines or pull quotes. It works particularly well for names, monograms, and title-case treatments where decorative initials can lead the composition.
The overall tone is polished and expressive, evoking traditional penmanship and classic invitation lettering. Its graceful curves and ornamental capitals communicate romance and ceremony more than casual handwriting, with a distinctly vintage, boutique feel.
The design appears intended to emulate formal, calligraphy-influenced handwriting with an emphasis on elegance and ornamentation. It prioritizes expressive swashes and a refined, pen-drawn rhythm for decorative typography rather than dense, long-form readability.
Spacing appears intentionally tight and the connected nature of the forms creates a strong horizontal flow, but the small x-height and fine hairlines make the texture more delicate at smaller sizes. The most distinctive visual feature is the contrast between restrained, compact lowercase and highly embellished uppercase swashes, which can become a focal point in mixed-case settings.