Script Laga 14 is a light, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, logotypes, packaging, elegant, romantic, formal, vintage, refined, formal script, luxury tone, decorative caps, handwritten feel, invitation use, swashy, ornamental, calligraphic, flowing, delicate.
A flowing calligraphic script with a pronounced rightward slant and crisp thick–thin modulation. Strokes taper to fine hairlines and expand into rounded, ink-like terminals, with frequent entry/exit strokes that create a continuous cursive rhythm. Capitals are more decorative and looped, featuring modest swashes and occasional extended arms, while the lowercase maintains a compact body with long ascenders/descenders and a smooth, consistent baseline movement. Overall spacing feels slightly open for a script, helping counters stay clear despite the delicate joins and high modulation.
Best suited to display settings where its fine hairlines and swashy capitals can be appreciated—wedding suites, invitations, greeting cards, boutique branding, packaging, and elegant headline treatments. It also works well for short pull quotes or signatures when set with generous size and breathing room.
The font conveys a polished, ceremonial tone—graceful and slightly old-world—suggesting formality, romance, and careful penmanship. Its ornamented capitals and fluid connections give it a celebratory feel suited to elegant messaging rather than everyday text.
Designed to emulate formal pointed-pen handwriting in a clean, repeatable typographic system, balancing decorative capitals with a more restrained lowercase for readable cursive words. The intention appears to be a versatile, upscale script that can add sophistication to titles and personal-name styling.
Numerals and punctuation follow the same pen-drawn logic, with curved forms and tapered endings that keep the set cohesive. The more elaborate uppercase shapes become the primary visual accents, so mixed-case settings read best when the caps are used sparingly as intended for initials.