Script Anneg 6 is a light, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, whimsical, romantic, refined, airy, decorative script, calligraphic feel, handcrafted tone, display emphasis, ornamental caps, calligraphic, flourished, looping, delicate, swashy.
This script features a calligraphic stroke model with strong thick–thin modulation, hairline entry/exit strokes, and rounded terminals. Letterforms are generally upright with a gentle rightward pull in the curves, and proportions are tall with relatively small counters and a modest x-height. Many capitals include extended lead-in strokes and subtle swashes, while lowercase forms use narrow loops and teardrop-like joins that suggest a pen-drawn rhythm. Spacing appears variable and organic, with some letters carrying longer left or right overhangs that add movement across a line.
This font is best suited to display applications where its contrast and flourishes can breathe, such as wedding suites, stationery, boutique branding, beauty or lifestyle packaging, and short headlines. It can work for brief phrases or pull quotes, but dense paragraphs or small sizes may lose clarity due to the fine hairlines and compact interior spaces.
The overall tone feels elegant and personable, balancing formal calligraphy cues with playful, handwritten quirks. Its looping ascenders and soft curves create a romantic, boutique-like character, while the dramatic contrast adds a polished, special-occasion finish.
The design appears intended to provide a graceful, hand-lettered script look with decorative capitals and a lively baseline rhythm. It emphasizes elegance and expressiveness over strict uniformity, aiming to add a crafted, celebratory feel to titles and name-driven typography.
In running text, the joins are not uniformly continuous—some letters connect smoothly while others separate—creating a hand-rendered texture rather than a strictly engineered connected script. The numerals echo the same calligraphic contrast and curved shaping, with a particularly decorative “2” and “3” that read as display-oriented.