Script Itduv 2 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, packaging, greeting cards, elegant, whimsical, vintage, friendly, refined, calligraphic feel, decorative display, personal warmth, classic elegance, looped, calligraphic, swashy, rounded, bouncy.
A slanted, calligraphic script with pronounced thick–thin modulation and tapered stroke endings. Letterforms show generous loops and hooked entry/exit strokes, with rounded bowls and soft terminals that keep the texture smooth despite the contrast. Capitals lean decorative, with occasional extended curves and flourished shapes, while lowercase forms maintain a consistent cursive rhythm and compact vertical proportions. Numerals follow the same pen-written logic, mixing rounded counters with pointed joins and slight baseline play.
Best suited to short-to-medium text where the flourishes can shine: invitations and event stationery, boutique branding, product packaging, greeting cards, and display headlines. It can also work for pull quotes or social graphics when set with comfortable tracking and ample line spacing to preserve clarity.
The overall tone feels polished yet playful—like neat handwriting shaped by a pointed pen. Its lively loops and gentle bounce suggest warmth and approachability, while the crisp contrast and stylized capitals add a more formal, invitation-ready sheen. The result reads as romantic and slightly nostalgic rather than strictly contemporary.
The design appears intended to emulate refined, pen-written cursive with a balance of readability and ornament. It aims to provide a graceful script voice for decorative display use, offering expressive capitals and consistent handwritten motion for elegant, personable messaging.
Spacing appears relatively tight and the narrow proportions create an airy, linear flow in words, especially in mixed-case settings. Some letters carry distinctive swashes (notably in capitals and a few descenders), giving headlines a decorative sparkle but increasing visual complexity at smaller sizes.