Script Dimaz 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, packaging, social media, invitations, playful, friendly, casual, lively, handmade, hand lettering, expressive tone, compact display, modern brush, brushy, looping, bouncy, monoline-ish, expressive.
A casual, handwritten script with a brush-pen feel, built from flowing, slightly slanted strokes and frequent looped joins. Stroke contrast is pronounced, with tapered entry/exit strokes and heavier downstrokes that create a rhythmic, calligraphic texture. Letterforms are compact and narrow with elastic, variable widths across glyphs; caps are tall and simple with occasional swashes, while lowercase forms rely on rounded bowls, open counters, and long, smooth connectors. The overall silhouette is lively and uneven in a natural way, with soft terminals and modest baseline bounce.
Best suited to short, prominent text such as headlines, logos, product packaging, greeting cards, and social posts where a handmade voice is desired. It can work for brief blurbs or pull quotes, but longer paragraphs may benefit from larger sizing and generous line spacing to keep the dense script texture readable.
The font reads warm, approachable, and upbeat—more like quick hand lettering than formal engraving. Its energetic loops and tapering strokes give it a personable, crafty tone that feels celebratory without becoming overly ornate.
The design appears intended to emulate modern brush lettering in a clean, consistent digital form, prioritizing speed, flow, and personality over strict formal symmetry. Its narrow build and high-contrast strokes aim to deliver an expressive script look that stays punchy and compact in display settings.
Spacing appears fairly tight and the narrow proportions make the texture dense in longer lines; the strongest clarity comes at display sizes where the tapered strokes and loops have room to breathe. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with rounded shapes and simple, flowing constructions that match the script’s movement.