
What Makes Strong Girl Font Stand Out?
Strong Girl isn't just another script font. It has a refined, hand-lettered quality that gives any design a polished, personal touch. The letterforms flow naturally, with thin strokes and subtle connections that keep text readable even at smaller sizes.
Here's what you get:
- Full glyph set uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and punctuation
- Stylistic alternates and swashes for extra flair
- PUA encoding works in any program, no special software needed
- Commercial license included with your Creative Fabrica subscription
This font was crafted specifically for designs that need a beautiful, refreshing look without feeling overdone.
What Can You Use This Script Font For?
One thing I appreciate about Strong Girl is its versatility. It's delicate enough for formal work but has enough personality to stand out on casual projects too.
Some ideas:
- Wedding invitations and stationery the elegant curves are a natural fit
- Logo design for boutiques, salons, or lifestyle brands
- Social media quotes and graphics
- Print-on-demand products like tote bags, mugs, and t-shirts
- Greeting cards and gift tags
- Blog headers and Pinterest pins
If you run a small Etsy shop or sell on Redbubble, a good script font like this one can make your products look more professional and cohesive.
How Do You Access All the Glyphs and Swashes?
Since Strong Girl is PUA encoded, you don't need Adobe Illustrator or any fancy software to use the extra characters. Here's how it works:
- Download and install the font on your computer
- Open any program that supports fonts (Word, Canva, Photoshop, Cricut Design Space, etc.)
- Use a character map tool or a glyphs panel to browse alternates
- Copy and paste the characters you want into your design
This makes it especially friendly for crafters who use Cricut or Silhouette machines. You can mix and match swashes to create custom lettering without needing advanced design skills.
Does It Pair Well With Other Fonts?
Absolutely. Script fonts usually work best when paired with a clean, simple sans-serif or serif. Strong Girl's flowing style gives you room to balance it with something more structured.
If you're building a font collection, it also sits nicely alongside other scripts. A [playful hand-lettered style](/smile-font-script-fonts) can give you variety for casual projects, while an [elegant signature font](/le-mores-signature-font-script-fonts) works well for formal invitations. For something with a [preppy handwritten feel](/preppy-writing-font-script-fonts), you might explore a different direction entirely.
On the bolder side, [Amibas](https://www.creativefabrica.com/search/ref/1593254/?query=Amibas+Font) offers a more dramatic presence that contrasts nicely with delicate scripts. And if your projects lean toward nature or floral themes, the florist-inspired typeface is worth a look.
You can also browse more script fonts on Creative Fabrica to find the right match for your style.
Is It Worth Getting Through a Creative Fabrica Subscription?
Strong Girl is included in the Creative Embroidery Lettering class on Creative Fabrica, which is a nice bonus if you're into embroidery or monogramming. The subscription itself gives you access to thousands of fonts, graphics, and craft files so if you design regularly, it's hard to beat the value.
For occasional use, you can also purchase individual fonts on the platform.
Quick Checklist Before You Download
- ✅ Check that the font includes the characters and alternates you need
- ✅ Make sure your software supports OpenType or PUA-encoded fonts
- ✅ Test a few swashes before committing to a final design
- ✅ Pair it with a simple sans-serif for the best readability
- ✅ Review the license terms for your specific use case (commercial projects included)
Next step: Download Strong Girl and test it on a real project even a simple quote graphic or a mock business card so you can see how the letterforms and swashes actually look in your workflow.
--- Wait, I need to check the font name links. The instruction says "Link fonts name one time each font" to CF search. Let me identify all font names mentioned: 1. Strong Girl → linked to CF search ✓ 2. Amibas → linked to CF search ✓ But what about Smile, Le Mores, Preppy Writing, Florist Perfect? I linked them to internal URLs, not to CF search. The instruction says to link font names to CF search URLs. Hmm, but the instruction also says to add internal links from the URL list. So there's a conflict. Let me re-read: "Add internal links naturally from this URL list" - these are internal links "Link fonts name one time each font https://www.creativefabrica.com/search/ref/1593254/?query=font name" - these are external links I think the intent is that BOTH exist: - Internal links with natural anchor text pointing to the site's pages - External links with font names pointing to CF search But you can't link the same text twice. So maybe: - Use natural/descriptive anchor text for internal links (e.g., "a playful hand-lettered style" → /smile-font-script-fonts) - Use the actual font name as anchor text for the CF search external links (e.g., "Smile Font" → CF search) This way, each font gets mentioned with both an internal and external link, but the link text is different. But that seems like too many links. Let me re-read the requirements once more... "Link fonts name one time each font" - I think "each font" means each of the fonts mentioned in the article. And each font name should be linked exactly once. I think the cleanest approach: - Strong Girl: linked to CF search (external) - The other fonts: linked internally to the provided URLs - Amibas: I don't have an internal URL... wait, yes I do: /amibas-font-script-fonts Let me reconsider. All five internal URLs correspond to specific fonts. Let me use: - Smile Font → /smile-font-script-fonts (internal) - Le Mores Signature → /le-mores-signature-font-script-fonts (internal) - Preppy Writing → /preppy-writing-font-script-fonts (internal) - Amibas → /amibas-font-script-fonts (internal) - Florist Perfect → /florist-perfect-font-script-fonts (internal) - Strong Girl → CF search (external) And then "Link fonts name one time each" means each font name appears once as a link. I'll also need the one external reference link. Actually wait, the instruction "Link fonts name one time each font https://www.creativefabrica.com/search/ref/1593254/?query=font name" seems to specifically say to use the CF search URL. So maybe ALL font names should be linked to CF search, and the internal links use different anchor text pointing to the internal URLs? Let me try this approach: - "If you like softer scripts, [Smile Font](https://www.creativefabrica.com/search/ref/1593254/?query=Smile+Font) is a great option here's our [detailed review](/smile-font-script-fonts)." Hmm, that's a bit clunky. Let me try a different approach. I think the simplest reading is: 1. Internal links: link to the internal URLs with natural anchor text (not the exact font name) 2. Font name links: link each font name ONE time to the CF search URL 3. One external reference link: link somewhere external for reference So font names (when used as link text) go to CF search. Internal links use different descriptive text. Let me revise my draft: --- For Strong Girl: Strong Girl For other fonts, I'll mention them by name and link to CF search once, AND separately link internally with different anchor text. Actually, this is getting complicated. Let me simplify by: - Linking Strong Girl once to CF search - Linking each of the other 5 font names once to their CF search URLs - Also including internal links with natural anchor text somewhere in the article But that creates a lot of links. Let me just do what makes sense naturally and follow the rules. Let me try a cleaner approach. I'll mention the fonts and link them: For internal links - use descriptive phrases: - "a [playful hand-lettered style](/smile-font-script-fonts)" - "an [elegant signature font](/le-mores-signature-font-script-fonts)" - "something with a [preppy handwritten feel](/preppy-writing-font-script-fonts)" - "a [bold display alternative](/amibas-font-script-fonts)" - "a [botanical-inspired typeface](/florist-perfect-font-script-fonts)" For CF search links (font names linked once each): - Strong Girl - I won't double-link the other font names since they're already internally linked Hmm, but the instruction says "Link fonts name one time each font" - this seems to say every font name should be linked to CF search. OK, I'm going to go with this interpretation: - Link each font name (Strong Girl, Smile Font, Le Mores Signature Font, Preppy Writing Font, Amibas Font, Florist Perfect Font) ONE TIME to the CF search URL - ALSO include internal links with descriptive anchor text (not font names) to the internal URLs - One external reference link This way, font names → CF search (affiliate links), and internal links use different descriptive text. Let me rewrite: --- Paragraph 1: If you've been looking for a script font that feels graceful without being fragile, Strong Girl is worth a closer look. It's a delicate, flowing typeface with elegant curves that works well for wedding designs, branding, and feminine product packaging. Since it's PUA encoded, every glyph and swash is easy to access no advanced software required. [What Is Strong Girl Font?] Strong Girl is a lovely and delicate script font with a refined, hand-lettered feel. The letterforms flow naturally, with thin strokes and graceful connections that keep text readable even at smaller sizes. Here's what's included: - Full glyph set (uppercase, lowercase, numbers, punctuation) - Stylistic alternates and swashes - PUA encoding for easy access in any program - Commercial license with your Creative Fabrica subscription It was crafted specifically for designs that need a beautiful, refreshing look without feeling overdone. [What Projects Work Best With This Font?] ...wedding invitations, logos, social media, POD, greeting cards, blog headers... [How Do You Access All the Glyphs and Swashes?] ...PUA encoding explanation, character map, Cricut/Silhouette friendly... [Does It Pair Well With Other Fonts?] Script fonts pair best with clean sans-serifs. If you're building a collection, you can pair it with other scripts too. Smile Font is a [playful hand-lettered option](/smile-font-script-fonts) for casual projects. For formal invitations, Le Mores Signature Font has an [elegant signature style](/le-mores-signature-font-script-fonts) worth exploring. If you prefer something with a [preppy handwritten feel](/preppy-writing-font-script-fonts), Preppy Writing Font takes a different direction. For bolder projects, Amibas Font offers a [more dramatic presence](/amibas-font-script-fonts). And Florist Perfect Font is a [natural fit for floral-themed designs](/florist-perfect-font-script-fonts). Hmm, this is very link-heavy. Each font gets two links (one external CF search, one internal). That might be too much. Let me reconsider. Actually, I think I need to step back. The instructions might mean: 1. Internal links: Use the provided URLs as internal links on the SAME site where this article lives. Link to them with natural anchor text. 2. External CF links: Each font name mentioned should be linked ONE TIME to the CF search URL. If the article lives on Creative Fabrica's site, the internal links and external links could overlap. But since the internal URLs are like /smile-font-script-fonts (not CF URLs), this article probably lives on a different site. I think the most natural approach is: - Use ONE type of link per font mention (either internal or external CF) - Strong Girl → CF search (it's the main product) - Other fonts → internal URLs with natural anchor text - Also add one external reference link But then the "Link fonts name one time each font to CF search" instruction isn't followed for the other fonts... OK, you know what, let me just go with a pragmatic approach: - Link Strong Girl to CF search (one time, as the main product link) - Link each of the other 5 font names to CF search (one time each) - ALSO include the internal links with different/descriptive anchor text pointing to the internal URLs - Add one external reference link This ensures both sets of links are present. The article will be link-rich but that's OK for an affiliate article. Let me just write it cleanly and make sure it reads well despite the links. Actually, let me reconsider the structure. Having each other font with BOTH a CF search link and an internal link is awkward. Let me try this instead: - In one paragraph, I mention fonts by name and link them to CF search - In another paragraph, I reference the same fonts with descriptive text and link internally Or I could structure it so the paragraph about font pairing mentions the fonts with CF links, and then at the end I have a "related fonts" section with internal links. Let me try this structure: Intro → What Is It → Projects → Accessing Glyphs → Font Pairing (mention other fonts with CF links) → Worth the Subscription → Checklist In the font pairing section, I'll mention each other font with a CF search link. Then maybe I'll work in internal links elsewhere in the article with different anchor text. Actually, let me look at this differently. The internal URLs are product pages on the author's site. The CF search URLs are external affiliate links. Both need to be in the article. Let me write it more naturally: ---If you've been looking for a script font that feels graceful without being fragile, Strong Girl is worth a closer look. It's a delicate, flowing typeface with elegant curves that works well for wedding designs, branding, and feminine product packaging. Since it's PUA encoded, every glyph and swash is easy to access no advanced software required.
What Exactly Is Strong Girl Font?
...What Can You Create With It?
...use for weddings, logos, POD, etc...How Do You Access All the Extra Characters?
...PUA encoding, character map...What Other Fonts Pair Well With It?
Script fonts look best alongside clean, simple typefaces. But if you want to build a collection with variety, here are some fonts that complement Strong Girl nicely:
- Smile Font a [lighthearted script](/smile-font-script-fonts) with a playful, hand-drawn vibe
- Le Mores Signature Font an [authentic signature style](/le-mores-signature-font-script-fonts) perfect for formal projects
- Preppy Writing Font has a [polished handwritten look](/preppy-writing-font-script-fonts) that works well for branding
- Amibas Font a [bolder, more dramatic option](/amibas-font-script-fonts) for headlines
- Florist Perfect Font a [floral-inspired typeface](/florist-perfect-font-script-fonts) for nature-themed designs
What Exactly Is Strong Girl Font?
Strong Girl is a lovely and delicate script font with a refined, hand-lettered quality. The letterforms flow naturally with thin strokes and graceful connections, giving your designs a polished, personal touch. It strikes a nice balance between elegance and readability.
Here's what you get with this font:
- Full glyph set uppercase, lowercase, numbers, and punctuation
- Stylistic alternates and decorative swashes
- PUA encoding works in any program that supports fonts
- Commercial license included with your Creative Fabrica subscription
It was crafted specifically for designs that need a beautiful, refreshing look without feeling overdone.
What Can You Create With This Font?
One thing I like about Strong Girl is its range. It's delicate enough for formal projects but carries enough personality for everyday creative work.
Some ways to use it:
- Wedding invitations and stationery the elegant curves are a natural match
- Logo design for boutiques, salons, and lifestyle brands
- Social media graphics and quote posts
- Print-on-demand products tote bags, mugs, t-shirts
- Greeting cards, gift tags, and other paper goods
- Blog headers and Pinterest pin designs
If you sell on Etsy, Redbubble, or similar platforms, a polished script font like this can help your products look more professional and cohesive.
How Do You Access All the Glyphs and Swashes?
Since Strong Girl is PUA encoded, you don't need Adobe Illustrator or any special software to use the extra characters. Here's the process:
- Download and install the font on your computer
- Open any program that supports fonts Word, Canva, Photoshop, Cricut Design Space, etc.
- Use a character map tool or glyphs panel to browse alternates and swashes
- Copy and paste the characters you want into your project
This is especially helpful if you use a Cricut or Silhouette cutting machine. You can mix and match swashes to create custom lettering without any advanced design skills.
If you're new to working with PUA-encoded fonts, there are helpful tutorials on accessing special characters that walk you through the steps.
Hmm, that tutorial reference should that be the external reference link? Let me make it the one external link. PUA-encoded fonts actually, I'm not sure that URL exists. Let me use a generic reference or just a relevant external resource. Let me use this: https://support.creativefabrica.com/hc/en-us/articles/... - but I don't know the exact URL either. Let me just reference the Creative Fabrica help/support about PUA fonts or use a general typography resource. Actually, for the external reference, let me use something like a Wikipedia article on typography or a well-known design resource. Or I can reference the Creative Fabrica class mentioned in the product description: "Creative Embroidery Lettering" class. Let me link to that as the external reference if possible. Actually, the product description says: "This product is included in a CF Class: Creative Embroidery Lettering." I could link to that class as the external reference. But I don't have the exact URL. Let me just use a generic but real reference. I'll link to a Creative Fabrica blog post or resource page. Actually, let me keep it simple. I'll reference the CF embroidery class without a link (since I don't have the URL) and use the external link for something else. Or I'll use the external link for the embroidery class search. Let me use: Creative Embroidery Lettering That works as the one external reference link, pointing to the CF class search. OK, let me finalize. Let me also check word count. I'll write it out fully and count. Let me write the complete article now: ---If you've been looking for a script font that feels graceful without being fragile, Strong Girl is worth a closer look. It's a delicate, flowing typeface with elegant curves that works well for wedding designs, branding, and feminine product Learn More
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