Script Nimiw 14 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: wedding, invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, romantic, refined, vintage, airy, calligraphic feel, luxury tone, display focus, formal voice, swashy, calligraphic, flowing, looped, graceful.
A formal cursive design with a consistent rightward slant and crisp, calligraphic modulation. Strokes move from hairline entries to bold, ink-rich downstrokes, creating a pronounced thick–thin rhythm and lively, brush-pen feel. Letterforms are compact and tightly fit, with tall ascenders, deep descenders, and frequent looped terminals; many capitals feature restrained swashes and tapered entry strokes. Overall spacing reads narrow and streamlined, with joins and connective strokes that encourage continuous word shapes rather than isolated letters.
Well suited to wedding suites, event invitations, and greeting cards where an elegant scripted voice is desired. It also works for boutique branding, product packaging, and short headline or logo applications that benefit from high-contrast calligraphy and decorative capitals. For best results, use at display sizes where the hairlines and connecting strokes remain clear.
The tone is polished and expressive, leaning toward classic, romantic correspondence and boutique elegance. Its high-contrast strokes and looping gestures feel celebratory and slightly theatrical, while still maintaining a disciplined, formal cadence suitable for premium branding.
The design appears intended to emulate refined pen calligraphy in a compact, streamlined script, balancing expressive loops with controlled structure. Its narrow proportions and dramatic contrast aim to deliver a luxurious, editorial feel while maintaining a consistent, readable cursive flow in short phrases and titles.
In text settings the strongest texture comes from the bold downstrokes, which form vertical accents against fine connecting hairlines. Capitals are prominent and stylistically active, so mixed-case lines tend to feel title-like; numerals carry the same italicized, calligraphic contrast and fit naturally alongside the letters.