Script Agrel 7 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, packaging, social posts, branding, playful, whimsical, friendly, airy, handmade, personal tone, display focus, handmade charm, compact elegance, monoline feel, looped ascenders, round terminals, bouncy baseline, open counters.
This typeface has a hand-drawn script character with slender, high-contrast strokes and a gently irregular rhythm that keeps it feeling human rather than mechanical. Letterforms are tall and condensed, with long ascenders and descenders, small bowls, and compact internal counters. Strokes frequently taper into fine terminals and occasional hook-like entry/exit marks, while rounded curves and soft joins maintain an easy flow even when letters are not fully connected. Overall spacing is tight and vertical, producing an elegant, narrow silhouette in both the alphabet and numerals.
This font is best suited to short-to-medium display text such as invitations, greeting cards, product packaging, and lifestyle branding where a friendly handwritten voice is desirable. It also works well for headers, pull quotes, and social graphics, especially when set with generous line spacing to preserve its tall, delicate strokes.
The overall tone is lighthearted and personable, like neat marker or brush-pen handwriting refined for display. Its looping shapes and buoyant movement suggest a casual charm suited to cheerful, craft-forward, or boutique contexts rather than formal corporate typography.
The design appears intended to capture the charm of handwritten script while keeping forms legible and consistent in a condensed footprint. By combining tall proportions, tapered terminals, and gentle loop motifs, it aims to deliver an approachable display script that feels crafted and personal without relying on heavy swashes.
Capitals show simple, tall constructions with minimal flourish, while lowercase forms lean on looped ascenders (notably in letters like b, d, f, h, l) to carry the script flavor. Numerals are similarly narrow and airy, with single-stroke curves and clean, open forms that match the letter rhythm.