Script Yemim 7 is a light, narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, wedding stationery, boutique branding, packaging accents, friendly, charming, romantic, polished, personal, warmth, legibility, elegance, informality, greeting, monoline, rounded, looped capitals, tapered terminals, smooth curves.
A slanted, monoline-style script with smooth, rounded curves and softly tapered terminals. Letterforms are compact and moderately tight in spacing, with consistent stroke thickness and a clean, even rhythm across words. Capitals introduce modest flourishes—loops and swashes on letters like Q, J, and S—while lowercase remains simpler and more streamlined for readability. Ascenders are prominent, descenders are neat and controlled, and the joins feel fluid rather than rigidly mechanical.
Well suited to invitations, greeting cards, wedding and event collateral, and boutique branding where a personable script is desired. It also fits packaging accents, social graphics, and pull quotes or short headlines when you want a warm, handwritten signature. For best clarity, it will perform strongest in display sizes rather than dense, small body text.
This script conveys a friendly, personable tone with a touch of classic charm. Its gentle curls and steady rhythm feel welcoming and slightly romantic without becoming overly ornate. Overall it reads as informal-elegant—polished enough for invitations, but still clearly human and approachable.
The design appears intended as a versatile, hand-script voice that balances decorative capitals with straightforward lowercase forms. It aims to deliver a handwritten feel while keeping word shapes consistent and readable in short to medium settings. The restrained ornamentation suggests an emphasis on practical elegance rather than high-calligraphy drama.
The uppercase set provides the main personality through looped entry/exit strokes, while the lowercase stays relatively restrained and consistent, helping text samples maintain an even color. Numerals follow the same slanted, handwritten logic, keeping the overall texture cohesive in mixed text settings.