Script Afliv 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, invitations, packaging, quotes, elegant, whimsical, romantic, handmade, vintage, hand-lettered feel, decorative elegance, space-saving display, boutique branding, looped, monoline, spidery, tall, airy.
A tall, condensed handwritten script with a light, wiry stroke and pronounced vertical emphasis. Letterforms are built from narrow ovals and long ascenders/descenders, with frequent looped entrances and exits that suggest continuous pen movement even when letters don’t fully connect. Contrast is noticeable within strokes, with tapered terminals and occasional thicker downstrokes that add calligraphic rhythm. The texture is clean but organic, with slight irregularities in curve tension and joins that reinforce a hand-drawn feel.
Best suited to display applications where its delicate strokes and tall proportions can be appreciated—logos, boutique branding, invitation suites, packaging accents, social graphics, and short editorial headers. It performs particularly well in mixed case, where the looping lowercase provides flow and the narrow caps add emphasis without heavy weight.
The font reads as elegant and playful at once—refined enough for decorative titles, yet informal and personable through its looping gestures and slightly quirky proportions. Its airy, slender shapes evoke a vintage note-taking or boutique signage mood, lending a gentle, romantic tone to short phrases.
The design appears intended to deliver a polished hand-lettered script for decorative typography, balancing graceful loops with a compact, space-saving silhouette. Its consistent narrowness and calligraphic tapering suggest a focus on stylish headlines and branding rather than long-form text.
Uppercase characters are especially narrow and elongated, creating a strong vertical cadence in all-caps settings. Lowercase forms keep a compact body with prominent extenders, so lines can feel lively but may need generous leading. Numerals follow the same narrow, loop-forward style, matching the alphabet well for display use.