Script Tigih 4 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, logotypes, packaging, elegant, classic, romantic, refined, inviting, formality, elegance, celebration, personal touch, decoration, flowing, looped, swashy, calligraphic, polished.
A flowing, right-leaning script with smooth, calligraphic stroke modulation and rounded terminals. Letterforms show generous loops and soft entry/exit strokes, with a consistent pen-like rhythm across the alphabet. Capitals are more ornate and taller, using curved swashes and teardrop-like joins, while the lowercase maintains compact bodies with long ascenders/descenders and a relatively low x-height. Spacing appears slightly tight and the overall silhouette is slender, giving words a continuous, cursive texture even where connections are implied rather than strictly uniform.
Best suited to display contexts where its flourishes and cursive rhythm can be appreciated: invitations, event materials, boutique branding, packaging accents, and short editorial headings. It performs especially well for names, titles, and pull quotes, and is less ideal for dense body copy where the tight script texture may reduce readability.
The tone is formal and graceful, with a traditional handwritten feel suited to polished, celebratory typography. It reads as warm and personable rather than casual, balancing decorative flourish with legibility for short phrases. The overall impression is romantic and classic, reminiscent of invitation and stationery lettering.
The design appears intended to provide a formal, calligraphy-inspired script that feels handcrafted yet controlled, with elegant capitals and smooth connected movement for prominent words and short statements. Its proportions and looping details prioritize a refined, decorative voice while maintaining a consistent, readable baseline flow.
Numerals follow the same slanted, cursive logic, with rounded shapes and subtle stroke contrast that keeps them visually aligned with the letters. Some capitals (notably those with large bowls and loops) create distinctive word-shapes and can become dominant at larger sizes, emphasizing a decorative, display-oriented character.