Script Onnuv 16 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, greeting cards, branding, packaging, elegant, romantic, classic, polished, inviting, signature style, formal elegance, cursive readability, decorative capitals, calligraphic, flowing, looped, slanted, smooth.
A flowing, right-slanted script with smooth, calligraphic strokes and moderate thick–thin modulation. Letterforms are narrow and rhythmically compact, with rounded bowls, tapered terminals, and frequent entry/exit strokes that encourage connection in running text. Capitals are more expressive, featuring larger loops and sweeping curves, while lowercase maintains a consistent cursive cadence with a notably low x-height and tall ascenders that add vertical sparkle. Numerals follow the same slanted, handwritten logic with soft curves and simplified forms.
Well suited to short-to-medium display text where an elegant cursive tone is desired, such as invitations, announcements, greeting cards, boutique branding, and product packaging. It can also work for headings, pull quotes, and signature-style accents when given sufficient size and whitespace for its loops and terminals to breathe.
The overall tone is refined and personable, balancing formality with a friendly handwritten warmth. Its graceful swashes and consistent slant give it a romantic, traditional feel suited to celebratory and etiquette-driven contexts rather than casual note-taking.
Designed to emulate a neat, formal handwritten signature style with a consistent cursive flow and restrained contrast. The intention appears to be delivering a classic, legible script for polished display settings, combining expressive capitals with a steady lowercase rhythm for usable word shapes.
Connections appear natural in many letter combinations, but spacing and joins still read clearly when set as words, avoiding excessive tangling. The more elaborate capitals can dominate at smaller sizes, making case choice and initial-letter use an important part of the typographic voice.