Script Ihdaz 14 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, headlines, branding, packaging, greeting cards, elegant, vintage, formal, romantic, cheerful, display script, formal voice, decorative caps, celebratory tone, connected, looped, swashy, rounded, smooth.
A connected, right-leaning script with rounded forms and continuous strokes that keep a steady rhythm across words. Strokes are robust and smooth with gentle contrast and clearly modeled entry/exit strokes that create soft joins between letters. Capitals are more decorative, featuring looped bowls and restrained swash-like terminals, while lowercase maintains a compact profile with a relatively small x-height and clear counters. Overall spacing is lively and variable, with flowing curves and occasional extended terminals that add movement without becoming overly ornate.
This font is well suited to invitations, announcements, greeting cards, and other event-driven materials where a formal script voice is desired. It also works effectively for short headlines, logos, and packaging accents, especially when set at larger sizes where its loops and joins can be appreciated. For longer passages, it is best used sparingly as a display or highlight face rather than continuous body text.
The tone is polished and personable, balancing classic formality with a friendly handwritten warmth. Its looping capitals and smooth connections evoke a vintage, celebratory feel suited to refined but approachable messaging.
The design appears intended to deliver a classic, connected script look with bold, smooth strokes and decorative capitals that read as refined and celebratory. It prioritizes flowing word shapes and an elegant headline presence over strict text-face regularity.
The figures follow the same calligraphic logic as the letters, appearing rounded and slightly cursive, which helps maintain stylistic consistency in mixed alphanumeric settings. The ampersand in the sample reads as a prominent, decorative element that reinforces the script’s ornamental character.