Script Giha 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logotypes, packaging, posters, invitations, vintage, playful, friendly, whimsical, folksy, retro charm, display impact, hand-lettered feel, ornamental caps, friendly tone, rounded, soft terminals, curly swashes, ball terminals, decorative.
A heavy, rounded script with a lively, hand-drawn rhythm and gently varied stroke weight. Forms are compact and curvilinear, with bulbous terminals, teardrop-like joins, and frequent inward curls that create small counters and looped details. Capitals are especially decorative, featuring exaggerated bowls and swashy entry/exit strokes, while lowercase letters keep a consistent, bouncy texture with occasional simplified connections. Numerals and punctuation follow the same soft, sculpted treatment, reading more like stylized lettering than rigid text figures.
Best suited to display settings where its curvy detailing and chunky strokes can be appreciated—headlines, branding marks, product packaging, menus, and poster-style layouts. It also fits short-form celebratory or themed materials (cards, invitations, pull quotes), while extended body text may feel dense due to the tight counters and decorative joins.
The font feels nostalgic and personable, with a confectionary, sign-painter charm that leans playful rather than formal. Its rounded curls and bold silhouettes give it a welcoming, slightly theatrical tone suited to expressive messaging.
Likely designed to emulate bold hand-lettered script with a retro, ornamental sensibility, prioritizing personality and silhouette over strict typographic neutrality. The consistent rounded terminals and swashy capitals suggest an aim toward charming, attention-getting display typography for titles and brand-forward phrases.
The pronounced curves and tight internal spaces create a strong black shape on the page, so spacing and line breaks matter for clarity at smaller sizes. Capitals carry much more flourish than lowercase, producing a distinctive headline cadence when used in title case.