Script Elbab 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, invitations, casual, expressive, friendly, lively, handmade, handwritten feel, expressive display, compact headlines, playful tone, brushy, organic, looping, bouncy, informal.
A lively handwritten script with brush-pen texture and an overall rightward slant. Strokes show noticeable pressure variation, producing tapered entry/exit strokes and occasional heavier downstrokes. Letterforms are narrow and upright-leaning with variable proportions, giving a rhythmic, slightly bouncy baseline and an intentionally irregular, human cadence. Connections are implied rather than strictly continuous, and terminals often finish with flicks, hooks, or rounded teardrops; counters stay compact and somewhat closed, especially in rounded forms.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where personality matters—brand marks, packaging callouts, posters, and social graphics. It can also work for casual invitations or headings, especially when paired with a simple sans for supporting text. For readability, it performs better at larger sizes where the tight counters and narrow spacing have room to breathe.
The font reads as upbeat and personable, with a quick, spontaneous energy typical of marker or brush lettering. Its narrow, animated forms and flicked terminals give it a chatty, youthful tone—more playful than formal—while still feeling controlled enough for prominent display lines.
Designed to capture fast, confident brush handwriting with a compact footprint, balancing expressive stroke endings and pressure contrast with consistent overall rhythm. The aim appears to be an energetic, approachable script that creates distinctive silhouettes and lively texture in headlines and branding.
Capitals are simplified and gestural, mixing printed and script-like structures to create strong word shapes. Descenders (notably in g, j, y) are long and fluid, adding vertical movement, while dots and small details appear slightly offset in a natural, hand-drawn way. Numerals follow the same brushy construction and maintain the informal rhythm of the alphabet.