Script Opbor 3 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, headlines, posters, social media, friendly, retro, confident, playful, casual, handmade feel, display impact, expressive initials, casual branding, brushy, rounded, looped, lively, smooth.
A slanted, brush-like script with connected lowercase forms and a steady, rhythmic flow. Strokes are thick and rounded with soft, tapered terminals that suggest a fast marker or sign-painting brush, and the joins are smooth rather than sharply calligraphic. Capitals are more ornate and swashy, with occasional entry loops and broad curves, while lowercase maintains compact proportions and relatively short extenders, keeping word shapes dense and energetic. Numerals follow the same cursive logic, with simplified, rounded forms that sit comfortably alongside the letters.
Best suited to branding and logo lockups, packaging, café/food labeling, posters, and short promotional headlines where a bold handwritten voice is desired. It can work for pull quotes or social media graphics, but longer passages may feel heavy and compact due to the dense cursive rhythm.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, with a hand-made confidence that reads as modern-retro rather than formal. Its lively slant and bouncy curves give it a conversational feel, making text appear welcoming and expressive while still staying cohesive and legible at display sizes.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, personable script that captures the immediacy of brush lettering while remaining consistent and repeatable for digital typesetting. It emphasizes expressive capitals and smooth connectivity to create strong, attention-grabbing wordmarks and titles.
Stroke weight stays fairly consistent across the alphabet, but subtle pressure changes appear at turns and terminals, enhancing the brush-script impression. The texture is smooth and clean (not distressed), and spacing feels geared toward connected word setting, with capitals designed to stand out as logo-like initials.