Script Kilun 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, ornate, classic, romantic, refined, formality, decoration, luxury, celebration, personal touch, swashy, looped, calligraphic, flourished, decorative.
A slanted, calligraphic script with pronounced thick–thin modulation and a glossy, pen-like finish. Uppercase letters are highly embellished, featuring interior loops, curled terminals, and occasional spiral-like counters that give the caps a monogram feel. Lowercase forms are more restrained and readable, with smooth joins, rounded shoulders, and long, tapered ascenders/descenders that keep a steady cursive rhythm. Figures are similarly stylized and slightly irregular in footprint, matching the script’s variable, hand-drawn cadence while maintaining consistent stroke contrast.
Best suited to display use where its swashy capitals can breathe—wedding suites, event collateral, boutique branding, packaging labels, certificates, and short headlines. It can work for brief phrases or pull quotes at comfortable sizes, but the ornamental cap detailing favors moderate-to-large settings over dense body text.
The font conveys a formal, celebratory tone—graceful and slightly theatrical—evoking invitations, vintage stationery, and decorative branding. Its flourished capitals add a sense of ceremony and personalization, while the smoother lowercase keeps the overall voice polished rather than whimsical.
The design appears aimed at delivering a formal, hand-lettered script with decorative, signature-like capitals that elevate simple words into a premium, ceremonial mark. It balances readable cursive lowercase with attention-grabbing uppercase flourishes for branding and occasion-driven typography.
Contrast is strongest in curved strokes and entry/exit hairlines, and terminals often finish with soft hooks or rounded teardrops. The cap set is visually dominant and works best when given space; in tighter settings the ornate interior curls can become the main texture of a line.