Script Pukol 14 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, invitations, packaging, social media, logos, playful, friendly, whimsical, crafty, nostalgic, handmade feel, casual elegance, personal tone, decorative display, signature style, monoline-ish, brushy, bouncy, looped, rounded.
A casual, hand-drawn script with tall ascenders/descenders and a compact lowercase body, giving the face a slightly top-heavy, airy rhythm. Strokes show a brush-pen feel with noticeable contrast between thicker downstrokes and finer connecting hairlines, plus soft, rounded terminals. Letterforms are generally upright with gentle bounce and occasional loops, and the joins between letters are smooth without becoming overly ornate. Uppercase characters read as simplified, handwritten caps that pair naturally with the more flowing lowercase, while numerals follow the same informal, drawn-with-a-pen character.
Best suited to short display settings such as greetings, invitations, quotes, product labels, and boutique branding where a friendly handwritten voice is desired. It can also work for social posts, lightweight logos, and headers, especially when set with generous tracking or in mixed-case to preserve clarity at smaller sizes.
The overall tone is warm and personable, with a light, playful charm that feels handmade and approachable. Its bouncy movement and looping details lean toward whimsical, crafty applications rather than formal or corporate typography.
Designed to evoke an easy, pen-and-brush handwritten note: expressive, legible, and decorative without heavy calligraphic complexity. The intent appears to balance everyday friendliness with enough flourish and contrast to stand out in headlines and branded phrases.
Spacing and connections are tuned for word shapes that feel continuous and conversational, though the strong stroke contrast and narrow proportions make the texture more decorative than text-oriented. The capitals provide clear entry points for headings, and the lively lowercase gives phrases a signature-like motion.