Script Riduf 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, invitations, branding, packaging, greeting cards, elegant, whimsical, refined, handcrafted, airy, modern calligraphy, decorative elegance, handmade feel, boutique branding, monoline hairlines, brushy, calligraphic, tall ascenders, long descenders.
A tall, slender script with pronounced stroke contrast, pairing thick, brush-like downstrokes with hairline upstrokes and entry/exit flicks. Letterforms are mostly upright with a gentle, hand-drawn sway, and spacing stays open enough to keep the delicate joins and counters from clogging. Capitals are narrow and looping with occasional swashy terminals, while lowercase forms show compact bodies and extended ascenders/descenders that create a vertical, ribbon-like rhythm. Numerals echo the same contrast and tapered endings, leaning on simple, calligraphic construction rather than rigid geometry.
This font is best suited to display settings such as invitations, boutique branding, beauty/fashion packaging, greeting cards, and short headline phrases. It can work well for pull quotes or labels where the tall, calligraphic forms can breathe, especially in high-resolution print or clean digital contexts.
The overall tone feels polished yet personable—like modern calligraphy done with a confident, light touch. Its thin strokes and tall proportions read as graceful and fashion-forward, with a subtle playful charm coming from the bouncy terminals and varied stroke energy.
The styling suggests an intention to capture contemporary hand-lettered calligraphy with a refined, high-contrast brush feel. It aims to deliver a decorative script voice that looks personal and crafted while remaining clean and controlled for modern branding and celebratory design.
The design’s fine hairlines and delicate joins give it an airy presence but also make it more sensitive to size, background texture, and reproduction method. The narrow, looping capitals are a strong stylistic feature and can become the dominant voice in headlines and short phrases.