styles

Script tattoo fonts for names and words

The short answer: the four main tattoo lettering families are classic cursive script, blackletter, typewriter/serif, and fine line minimal. What decides how yours looks in ten years is spacing and size, not the font: keep letters at least 1cm tall, give cursive loops room to breathe, and proofread obsessively — spelling and translation errors are permanent.

The main lettering families

FamilyThe lookBest for
Classic tattoo scriptFlowing cursive with flourishes — the traditional banner-and-name lookNames, short phrases, memorial dates
Blackletter / gothicHeavy, angular, old-English weightSingle bold words; reads strong at distance
Typewriter / serifClean book-print lettersQuotes and longer lines — most legible per inch
Fine line minimalThin single-needle handwritingSmall, quiet one-word pieces — with caveats below

Pick the family by what the words mean to you, then let the aging rules below set the size and spacing.

What makes lettering age well — or badly

Letter spacing is the whole game. Every tattoo line spreads slightly over the years, and lettering fails in a specific way: the gaps inside and between letters close up. Tight cursive loops — the e, the a, the o — fill in first, and a delicate name becomes an unreadable ribbon.

Placement decides readability

Text is meant to be read, so put it where reading happens. The forearm is the classic choice — flat, visible to you, and it reads at a glance. Ribs and collarbone script flows beautifully with the body's curve, though you trade some at-a-glance legibility for elegance. The spine stacks words vertically and reads as a design element more than text. Whatever the spot, check the piece from normal conversational distance, not nose-to-skin.

The non-negotiable: proofread

Spelling and translation errors are permanent. Before the needle touches skin: read the stencil letter by letter, backwards, out loud. Have a second person do the same. For any non-English text — a name in kanji, a Latin phrase, an Arabic word — get verification from a native speaker or qualified translator, not a translation app. "No regerts" is a joke because it keeps happening.

For names and dates, conventions are simple: verify the spelling against a document, not memory; write dates in the format the person would have used; and give memorial pieces a day of reflection between finalizing the text and booking.

See your words on your skin first

The fastest way to settle font, size, and placement is to look at the actual words on your actual body. Tattoo AI does exactly that:

  1. Generate your word or name — type the exact text and pick the Script style. Try a cursive version and a bolder one.
  2. Upload a photo of the placement — forearm, collarbone, ribs.
  3. Place it at true size — resize and rotate until it sits along the body's line the way lettering should.
  4. Check readability at arm's length — hold the phone away from your face. If you squint now, skin will only make it worse.
Tattoo AI style list showing Traditional, Script, Realism, Japanese, Fine Line, and Neo Traditional styles
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