Script Dusi 7 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, greeting cards, branding, packaging, elegant, romantic, playful, classic, refined, celebration, premium feel, signature style, decorative display, handwritten elegance, looping, swashy, calligraphic, flowing, ornate.
A formal, right-leaning script with smooth, continuous stroke flow and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Letterforms are built from rounded counters, teardrop terminals, and looping entry/exit strokes, creating a lively, handwritten rhythm while maintaining consistent spacing and baseline discipline. Capitals are decorative and generously curved, with occasional flourished joins and internal loops; lowercase forms keep compact bodies with tall ascenders and deep descenders that add vertical grace. Numerals echo the same calligraphic construction, using tapered strokes and soft curves for an integrated, cohesive set.
Well-suited to wedding and event collateral, greeting cards, beauty or boutique branding, and packaging where an expressive signature-like voice is desired. It performs best for headlines, names, short phrases, and pull quotes, and is less ideal for long-form text at small sizes where fine hairlines and flourishes may compete with legibility.
The overall tone feels polished and personable—like careful penmanship intended for special occasions. Its high contrast and swashy curves read as romantic and celebratory, while the bouncy rhythm keeps it approachable rather than rigidly formal.
The design appears intended to simulate an elegant, penned script with a crafted, premium feel—balancing decorative capitals and looping terminals with a readable, consistent lowercase for practical display typography.
The design relies on connecting strokes and curls to create momentum across words, so it looks most natural when allowed some size and breathing room. The most embellished capitals can become visually dominant in dense settings, making hierarchy and pairing especially important.