Script Ihkub 2 is a bold, normal width, very high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, headlines, logos, packaging, formal, romantic, vintage, ceremonial, ornate, elegance, ornamentation, formality, display, tradition, swashy, calligraphic, looped, slanted, brushed.
A slanted, calligraphic script with prominent entry/exit strokes and frequent swashes, especially in capitals. Letterforms show a clear thick–thin rhythm, with heavy downstrokes and hairline upstrokes, and rounded terminals that often finish in teardrop-like shapes. Uppercase glyphs are large and decorative with looping flourishes, while the lowercase is more compact and rhythmically cursive, maintaining consistent forward motion and smooth joins in text. Numerals follow the same flowing construction, mixing sturdy bowls with tapered, curling terminals for a cohesive set.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings such as wedding suites, formal invitations, greeting cards, event titles, premium packaging, and logo wordmarks. It also works for pull quotes or chapter openers when set large enough to preserve the fine hairlines and when given breathing room around swashes.
The overall tone is elegant and celebratory, with a classic, courtly feel that reads as refined rather than casual. Its dramatic contrasts and swashes add a sense of romance and tradition, suggesting invitations, ceremonies, and heritage branding.
The font appears designed to emulate formal penmanship with a polished, engraved-like contrast and showy capitals, balancing legible cursive flow with decorative presence. Its construction prioritizes a refined, traditional script look that signals luxury and ceremony.
The design favors display impact over small-size clarity: the hairlines and interior counters can become delicate, and the pronounced swashes create an active silhouette that benefits from generous spacing and careful line breaks. Capitals are particularly dominant, so text set in title case will feel more ornamental than the same words in lowercase.