Script Yibow 3 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, quotes, warm, friendly, polished, classic, personal, handwritten, elegance, readability, fluidity, charm, connected, rounded, smooth, flowing, signature-like.
The design is a right-leaning, connected script with smooth, continuous strokes and rounded terminals. Letterforms show modest stroke modulation with clean curves, restrained loops, and occasional entry/exit swashes that help maintain a steady writing rhythm across words. Ascenders are relatively prominent compared with the compact lowercase body, and capitals are more expressive without becoming ornate, keeping the texture even in longer lines. Numerals and punctuation follow the same handwritten logic, with open shapes and consistent stroke endings.
It suits invitations, greeting cards, quotes, and brand accents where a personal, handwritten touch is desired. The steady rhythm also works well for packaging, café or boutique identity elements, social graphics, and short paragraphs in editorial pull-quotes. For best results, it will shine in headlines, signatures, and callouts where its connected flow and capital styling can be appreciated.
This script carries a friendly, personable tone with a lightly formal, signature-like polish. Its flowing motion and gentle swells feel warm and welcoming, while the tidy rhythm keeps it from becoming overly playful. Overall it reads as classic and approachable rather than loud or edgy.
This font appears designed to emulate neat, confident penmanship with enough structure for continuous reading. It emphasizes smooth connectivity, consistent slant, and controlled flourish so words feel natural and written in one pass, while remaining clear at display and short-text sizes.
Connectivity is consistent through most lowercase combinations, producing an even word shape and a smooth baseline flow. Capitals are slightly more gestural and separated in feel, creating a clear hierarchy at the start of names and sentences, while maintaining compatibility with the lowercase’s continuous joining.