Script Delut 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, elegant, whimsical, romantic, artful, friendly, hand-lettered feel, decorative display, signature styling, romantic tone, expressive contrast, looping, monoline accents, swashy, bouncy, calligraphic.
A flowing script with a right-leaning posture, pronounced thick–thin modulation, and smooth, brush-like terminals. Letterforms favor tall ascenders and deep descenders with compact lowercase bodies, creating a vertically oriented rhythm. Strokes alternate between hairline entry/exit strokes and fuller downstrokes, with frequent loop construction on capitals and select lowercase letters. Spacing and joins feel handwritten rather than mechanically uniform, giving words a lively, slightly bouncing baseline and an organic, drawn-in-one-go continuity.
Best suited to display applications where expressive script is desired, such as wedding suites, invitations, greeting cards, boutique branding, and product packaging. It works well for short headlines, names, and signature-style marks, and can add charm to pull quotes or social graphics when set with generous size and spacing.
The overall tone is refined yet playful, balancing elegant calligraphic contrast with buoyant, personable movement. Its loops and swashes add a decorative, celebratory feel that reads as warm and expressive rather than formal or rigid.
Designed to emulate a confident, hand-lettered calligraphic style with decorative capitals and lively stroke contrast. The intention appears to be an attention-grabbing script for expressive display typography, prioritizing personality and flourish over dense text readability.
Capitals are highly embellished and can dominate the texture, especially in short words or initial caps. The numerals echo the same contrast and curvature, with simplified shapes that keep the set cohesive. At smaller sizes, the fine hairlines and tight interior counters may soften or fill in, while larger settings emphasize the graceful stroke variation and flourished forms.