Script Kugum 7 is a light, normal width, very high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, luxury branding, headlines, certificates, elegant, romantic, formal, refined, vintage, showpiece caps, formal script, calligraphic elegance, ornamental branding, calligraphic, flourished, swashy, delicate, slanted.
A flowing, calligraphy-driven script with a pronounced rightward slant and dramatic thick–thin stroke modulation. Capitals are highly ornamental, featuring long entry/exit swashes, looped terminals, and extended hairline flourishes that create sweeping silhouettes. Lowercase forms are more compact and angled, with narrow counters, sharp joins, and occasional lifted connections that read as pen-written rather than fully continuous. The x-height is notably small relative to the ascenders, and spacing feels airy due to fine hairlines and generous sidebearings in many glyphs. Numerals echo the same engraved-calligraphy flavor, with angled stress and curled terminals.
Well-suited to wedding suites, event stationery, certificates, and elegant packaging where decorative capitals can be featured. It also works for short headlines, monograms, and logo wordmarks that can accommodate its flourishes and slanted rhythm. For extended text, it is most effective in brief passages or pull quotes where size and spacing can support the fine details.
The font projects a polished, ceremonial tone—graceful and expressive rather than casual. Its ornate capitals and delicate hairlines evoke classic invitations, boutique branding, and formal correspondence, with a distinctly romantic, old-world sensibility.
Designed to emulate refined pointed-pen lettering with showpiece capitals and controlled, angled lowercase forms. The overall intention appears to balance readable cursive movement with ornamental swash work for high-end, formal display typography.
The visual emphasis sits strongly in the uppercase: large swashes and looping structures can dominate a line and benefit from ample margins and line spacing. Fine connecting strokes and hairline details suggest it will read best when given enough size and contrast against the background, especially in longer phrases where the slant and flourishes set the rhythm.