Script Bokiz 7 is a light, narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invites, greeting cards, branding, packaging, social posts, elegant, whimsical, romantic, friendly, crafty, handwritten elegance, signature style, decorative display, personal warmth, monoline feel, bouncy baseline, looping ascenders, tall capitals, airy spacing.
A delicate, handwritten script with tall, slender letterforms and a lively, slightly bouncing rhythm. Strokes move between hairline-thin entries and heavier downstrokes, with tapered terminals and frequent looped ascenders/descenders that give the shapes an open, airy texture. Capitals are especially tall and gestural, often built from a single flowing motion, while lowercase forms stay compact with narrow bowls and minimal internal counters. Connections are implied by the cursive slant and entry/exit strokes, but letter spacing remains readable and not overly tangled, keeping words clear in the sample text.
Best suited to short-to-medium display copy such as invitations, greeting cards, lifestyle branding, product packaging accents, and social media graphics. It also works well for pull quotes, headings, and name marks where its tall capitals and looping strokes can be given room to breathe.
The overall tone is graceful and personable—more boutique and romantic than formal calligraphy. Its looping forms and buoyant movement feel playful and handcrafted, suggesting warmth, charm, and a light celebratory mood.
The design appears intended to capture a neat, modern handwritten signature look with expressive capitals and light, flowing joins, balancing personality with legibility for decorative text. Its consistent slant and rhythmic stroke pattern suggest a font meant to add a handcrafted finish to contemporary, friendly design systems.
Several glyphs lean on distinctive loop constructions (notably in letters with stems and descenders), which become a signature feature in longer words. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with simple, slender shapes and occasional curls, pairing naturally with the alphabet in casual display settings.