Script Ohfa 9 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, headlines, posters, invitations, vintage, friendly, lively, romantic, playful, hand-lettered look, retro signage, expressive display, friendly branding, rounded, swashy, looping, brushy, bouncy.
A slanted, brush-like script with rounded forms, tapered terminals, and smooth joining strokes that create a continuous rhythm across words. Strokes feel confidently weighted with gentle modulation and soft curves, while entry and exit strokes often finish in small hooks or teardrop-like terminals. Capitals are larger and more decorative, featuring occasional swashes and looping construction, while lowercase maintains a compact body with tall ascenders and energetic descenders. Overall spacing is airy enough to keep counters open, but the letterforms retain a dense, inked presence suitable for prominent display settings.
This font suits logos and brand marks that want a handcrafted feel, as well as packaging and label design where a friendly script can carry personality. It performs best in headlines, short phrases, and display copy—posters, menus, and event materials—where its swashes and connected rhythm can be appreciated without crowding. It’s also a natural fit for invitations and greeting-oriented designs that benefit from a celebratory, romantic script tone.
The font conveys a warm, personable tone with a nostalgic, sign-painter flair. Its buoyant slant and rounded brush curves suggest casual elegance—polished enough for celebratory messaging, yet relaxed and approachable. The overall impression is expressive and upbeat, with a hint of retro charm.
The design appears intended to emulate a bold, hand-lettered brush script with smooth connectivity, giving designers an easy way to achieve expressive, vintage-leaning lettering in a consistent digital typeface. The prominent capitals and lively stroke endings aim to add flair and momentum to titles and branding phrases while keeping the lowercase relatively compact for readable word shapes.
The numeral set follows the same cursive logic, with curved, calligraphic shapes that blend well with text. Word shapes are distinct and flowing, but the more decorative capitals can create a strong stylistic emphasis at the start of lines, making it especially characterful in headlines.