Script Kelid 12 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, greeting cards, branding, headlines, elegant, romantic, vintage, whimsical, refined, calligraphic elegance, display flair, romantic tone, signature look, decorative capitals, swashy, calligraphic, looped, flourished, delicate.
This script shows a calligraphic, right-leaning construction with pronounced thick–thin modulation and a smooth, pen-like stroke flow. Uppercase forms are highly stylized, featuring generous entry strokes, curled terminals, and occasional long swashes that extend beyond the cap height. Lowercase letters are more compact and rhythmically consistent, with rounded bowls, narrow counters, and soft joining behavior that reads as semi-connected rather than continuously linked. The figures follow the same high-contrast logic, mixing straight stems with curled ends and maintaining an overall light, elegant texture.
Best suited to short, prominent text such as invitations, wedding collateral, greeting cards, boutique branding, packaging accents, and editorial headlines. It can also work for pull quotes or section titles where an ornate, handwritten-script voice is desired and ample size helps preserve clarity.
The overall tone is polished and decorative, blending formal invitation energy with a playful, storybook charm. Its flourishes and looping capitals add a romantic, celebratory feel while still reading as composed and intentional rather than casual.
The design appears intended to emulate a pointed-pen calligraphic style with expressive capitals and graceful thick–thin contrast, prioritizing elegance and decorative impact in display typography. The restrained, more regular lowercase supports readable word shapes while allowing the uppercase flourishes to provide signature character.
Capitals carry much of the personality and can create a lively silhouette in title settings, while the small x-height and tight internal spaces make long passages feel more ornamental than utilitarian. Spacing appears tuned for display, with distinct word shapes driven by the dramatic capitals and tapered terminals.