Script Udlat 3 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, headlines, packaging, greeting cards, elegant, romantic, whimsical, vintage, refined, calligraphic feel, decorative titles, handmade charm, formal elegance, looped, flourished, calligraphic, slanted, delicate.
A delicate, calligraphic script with a pronounced rightward slant and hairline-to-stroke contrast that mimics a pointed-pen feel. Letterforms are built from smooth, continuous curves with frequent entry/exit swashes, teardrop terminals, and occasional enclosed loops in ascenders and capitals. Uppercase characters are larger and more expressive, featuring long lead-in strokes and gentle flourishes, while the lowercase stays compact with tall ascenders and descenders that create an airy vertical rhythm. Spacing is relatively open for a script, and many glyphs appear designed to sit cleanly side-by-side even when full joining isn’t always implied in the samples.
This font is well suited to short-form display settings such as invitations, event materials, boutique branding, product packaging, and greeting cards. It works best at larger sizes where the fine strokes and decorative terminals can remain crisp, and where the expressive capitals have room to breathe.
The overall tone is graceful and romantic, balancing formal invitation-like polish with a light, playful curl in its terminals. Its slender strokes and looping capitals convey a handcrafted, vintage-leaning charm that feels ceremonial without becoming rigid.
The design appears intended to emulate elegant handwritten lettering with a controlled, calligraphic cadence—prioritizing charm and flourish over utilitarian body-text neutrality. Its proportions and swashed capitals suggest it was drawn to add a personal, celebratory voice to titles and names.
Capitals show the strongest personality, with extended swashes that can increase line length and demand extra sidebearing in tight layouts. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with simple forms and occasional curved starts/finishes that keep them consistent with the letterforms.