Script Wikut 3 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, wedding, packaging, logo, elegant, whimsical, friendly, romantic, airy, display script, handwritten elegance, decorative capitals, personal tone, brand charm, looping, monoline, flourished, calligraphic, bouncy.
A delicate monoline script with a forward slant and generous looping in ascenders, descenders, and capitals. Strokes stay smooth and even, with rounded terminals and frequent entry/exit swashes that suggest pen-written motion. Uppercase forms are tall and decorative, often built from large oval loops, while lowercase maintains a compact core with long, curling extenders that create a lively vertical rhythm. Spacing is relatively open for a script, with a handwritten irregularity to widths that keeps words from feeling rigidly uniform.
Best suited to short, expressive settings where its swashes and looping capitals can be appreciated—wedding suites, greeting cards, boutique logos, packaging accents, and pull quotes. It can work for headings and small blocks of display text, but the busy extenders and compact lowercase benefit from comfortable sizing and generous line spacing.
The overall tone is graceful and personable—polished enough for formal notes, yet playful through its springy loops and soft curves. It reads as charming and slightly fanciful, evoking invitations, boutique branding, and handwritten correspondence rather than strict business formality.
Designed to provide a refined handwritten script with decorative capitals and consistent, pen-like linework. The intent appears to balance legibility with flourish, offering an approachable calligraphic voice for display typography.
Connections between letters appear intermittent rather than strictly continuous, so the font behaves like a script that can alternate between joined and separated gestures depending on the shapes involved. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with simple forms and occasional curls that match the letterforms’ swashed style.