Script Giba 14 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logo, packaging, headlines, posters, branding, retro, friendly, confident, playful, classic, display impact, handwritten charm, vintage appeal, signature feel, swashy, looped, rounded, brushy, high-ink.
A heavy, slanted script with rounded terminals, generous curves, and frequent looped joins that create a continuous, rhythmic flow. Strokes read as brush-like with smooth, tapered transitions and occasional thickened entry/exit strokes, giving a lively handwritten texture while staying fairly consistent across the alphabet. Capitals are prominent and decorative, featuring swashes and curled cross-strokes that add motion and presence; lowercase forms are compact with a relatively low x-height and strong, dark counters. Numerals match the script’s incline and weight, with soft curves and a slightly calligraphic, set-on-the-baseline feel.
Well suited to logos, wordmarks, and branding that want a bold handwritten signature, as well as packaging, menus, and poster headlines where the dark stroke and flowing connections can lead the eye. It also works effectively for invitations, seasonal promotions, and short display lines that benefit from expressive capitals and a continuous script rhythm.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, blending a nostalgic sign-painting flavor with a polished, celebratory feel. Its bold, looping forms communicate warmth and confidence, making text feel energetic and inviting rather than formal or restrained.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, connected handwritten look with a vintage display sensibility—combining confident stroke weight with decorative loops and swashes to create instantly recognizable, high-impact lettering.
The heavy weight produces strong color in text, and the pronounced slant plus swashy capitals add emphasis even at moderate sizes. Because the forms are dense and highly stylized, readability is strongest when given comfortable spacing and used in short-to-medium runs rather than tightly set paragraphs.