Calligraphic Sunem 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, headlines, packaging, branding, elegant, formal, warm, vintage, romantic, handcrafted, decorative, classic, expressive, refined, brushy, tapered terminals, swash capitals, pen-drawn.
The letters are italic and calligraphic in flavor, with moderately varied stroke thickness and a fluid, pen-like rhythm. Forms are open and rounded, with tapered entry and exit strokes and occasional swashes, especially in capitals. Spacing and widths vary naturally from letter to letter, reinforcing a hand-drawn cadence while keeping a consistent baseline and angle. The lowercase appears relatively small against the capitals, with compact proportions that read as a shorter x-height.
This font suits invitations, greeting cards, certificates, and event materials where a personal, formal script tone is desired. It works well for short-to-medium headlines, branding accents, packaging, and pull quotes that benefit from a handcrafted signature-like feel. For best clarity, it’s most at home at larger sizes where the delicate stroke modulation and compact lowercase can breathe.
This face carries a cultured, old-world warmth, like careful handwriting prepared for a formal note. Its gentle slant and soft, brushy terminals feel personable and expressive without becoming overly playful. The overall mood is elegant and slightly romantic, with a quiet vintage charm.
The design appears intended to emulate neat, formal penmanship—decorative enough to feel special, but structured enough to set longer phrases. It prioritizes a flowing, handwritten texture with tasteful flourish in uppercase forms, aiming for a refined, traditional impression rather than a casual note-taking look.
Capitals are notably ornate and prominent, with looping strokes and extended terminals that can create dramatic word shapes. Numerals follow the same slanted, handwritten logic and appear designed to blend with text rather than stand apart as rigid lining figures.