Script Luliw 14 is a very light, narrow, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, romantic, refined, formal, vintage, calligraphic elegance, decorative capitals, formal tone, luxury appeal, copperplate, hairline, swash, flourished, calligraphic.
A delicate formal script with pronounced thick–thin modulation and long, hairline entry and exit strokes. The letterforms slant consistently and use smooth, calligraphic curves with teardrop terminals and occasional looped joins, creating a continuous, flowing rhythm in text. Capitals are ornate and expansive, featuring extended swashes and open counters, while the lowercase is slimmer and more restrained with compact bowls and ascenders that taper into fine points. Numerals follow the same calligraphic logic, mixing sturdy shaded strokes with airy hairline curves.
Best suited to display typography where its swashes and shading can breathe—wedding suites, invitations, certificates, luxury labels, beauty and fragrance packaging, and elegant headlines. It works well for short phrases, names, and monograms, and can be paired with a simple serif or sans for supporting text.
The overall tone feels polished and ceremonial, combining a classic calligraphy sensibility with a light, airy delicacy. Its flourishes and high-contrast shading convey sophistication and romance, suggesting invitations, formal announcements, and premium branding.
Designed to emulate formal pen-calligraphy with a graceful forward slant, dramatic contrast, and decorative capitals. The intent appears to prioritize elegance and flourish for premium, celebratory, and traditional contexts rather than dense, small-size reading.
Contrast is so extreme that thin strokes become visually fragile at small sizes or on low-resolution outputs, while the shaded downstrokes carry most of the color. The most decorative energy sits in the capitals and in select ascenders/descenders, which can introduce occasional spacing and collision risks in tight settings or long all-caps words.