Script Abrim 3 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, greeting cards, invitations, headlines, whimsical, elegant, friendly, handmade, airy, handwritten elegance, decorative display, personal tone, boutique branding, looping, flourished, calligraphic, monoline feel, bouncy.
A flowing, handwritten script with a lightly calligraphic build and frequent entry/exit strokes that create gentle connections between letters. Strokes show pronounced thick–thin modulation and tapered terminals, with rounded bowls, soft curves, and occasional elongated ascenders/descenders that add rhythmic variety. Capitals are decorative and open, often featuring swashes and curled hooks, while lowercase forms remain legible with a lively, slightly irregular hand-drawn cadence. Numerals follow the same curving, loop-forward logic, pairing simple skeletons with elegant terminals.
Well-suited for branding and packaging that benefit from a personable signature-like tone, as well as invitations, greeting cards, and lifestyle editorial headlines. It can also work for short quotes or pull-out phrases where the decorative capitals and looping connections have room to breathe.
The overall tone is playful yet refined—suggesting personal warmth, boutique charm, and a touch of vintage-inspired polish. Its looping forms and soft endings read as welcoming and expressive rather than strict or technical, making it feel conversational and crafted.
Designed to deliver a graceful, handwritten voice that balances readability with ornamental flair. The emphasis on looping joins, tapered terminals, and expressive capitals suggests an intent to evoke bespoke, celebratory, or boutique aesthetics in display-oriented typography.
Letterforms maintain consistent slant and spacing while allowing subtle variation in width and flourish, which reinforces the hand-rendered character. The shorter lowercase proportions and tall ascenders create a delicate vertical rhythm, and the more ornate capitals can become a focal point in mixed-case settings.