Script Demif 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, romantic, whimsical, handcrafted, lively, modern calligraphy, signature look, decorative caps, display script, hand-lettered feel, brushy, looping, flourished, swashy, bouncy.
A flowing, calligraphic script with a brush-pen feel and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes are slanted and often taper to fine hairlines, while downstrokes build to dark, rounded terminals. Letterforms show a bouncy baseline rhythm with generous loops and occasional swashes, especially in capitals, and a mix of connected and semi-disconnected joins depending on the letter. The texture alternates between compact, narrow shapes and wider, looping counters, creating an animated, variable rhythm across words.
Best suited for display applications where its contrast and flourishes have room to breathe: wedding and event suites, beauty and lifestyle branding, product packaging, social graphics, and short headlines or pull quotes. It can work for brief subheads, but long paragraphs may feel busy due to the strong contrast and animated rhythm.
The overall tone is refined yet playful—suggesting modern hand-lettering with a romantic, boutique sensibility. Its lively stroke contrast and looping forms feel celebratory and personal, leaning toward elegant invitations and signature-style branding rather than utilitarian text.
Likely designed to emulate contemporary brush calligraphy in a polished, catalog-ready script: expressive capitals, smooth cursive movement, and high-contrast strokes that read as handcrafted while remaining visually consistent across a full alphabet and numerals.
Capitals are notably decorative and tall, with prominent entry/exit strokes that can extend into neighboring space. Lowercase forms keep a consistent cursive logic with rounded bowls and narrow stems, while numerals appear similarly handwritten and slightly irregular for an organic look. The sharp contrast means thin strokes can visually fade at small sizes, while the heavy downstrokes provide strong word shapes at display settings.