Script Ihmup 4 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, packaging, posters, headlines, signage, classic, elegant, friendly, confident, retro, handcrafted feel, vintage appeal, display impact, script elegance, brushy, rounded, swashy, smooth, looping.
A slanted, brush-script style with rounded terminals and a lively, calligraphic rhythm. Strokes are heavy and smoothly modulated, with clear entry/exit strokes and occasional teardrop-like terminals that suggest a brush or sign-painting tool. Letterforms are wide and generously curved, with prominent loops and soft joins; capitals are especially expressive, showing broad curves and swashy strokes without becoming overly intricate. Lowercase forms keep a compact x-height relative to tall ascenders/descenders, supporting an animated, bouncing baseline feel. Numerals follow the same cursive construction, with flowing shapes and consistent stroke presence.
Best suited to display work where its bold, flowing script can be appreciated—logos, brand marks, packaging labels, posters, and storefront-style signage. It also works well for short headlines, invitations, or quotes where a personable handwritten feel is desired, but it may become visually dense in long body text at small sizes.
The font reads as warm and personable while still feeling polished and traditional. Its sweeping curves and confident stroke weight give it a nostalgic, handcrafted tone associated with vintage signage and classic script lettering, leaning more bold and friendly than delicate or formal.
Designed to evoke a handcrafted, classic script look with the presence of a brush-lettered sign style. The emphasis is on expressive capitals, smooth cursive movement, and strong stroke weight to create immediate impact in branding and display typography.
Spacing appears intentionally open for a script, helping the thick strokes avoid clogging at display sizes, while the strong slant and looping forms keep the texture dynamic. The sample text shows good continuity across mixed-case words and punctuation, with capitals acting as visual anchors at the start of phrases.