Script Ifboh 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, invitations, headlines, greeting cards, warm, vintage, friendly, whimsical, personal, handwritten charm, expressive display, friendly branding, decorative capitals, looping, rounded, bouncy, swashy, monoline.
A flowing, connected script with a consistent, monoline-like stroke and rounded terminals. Letterforms lean forward with a smooth, bouncy baseline rhythm and generous entry/exit strokes that frequently link characters in text. Capitals are prominent and decorative, featuring looped strokes and occasional swash-like curves, while lowercase forms are compact with tight counters and simplified joins. Overall spacing is moderate, with a slightly condensed feel and a lively, handwritten regularity rather than strict geometric construction.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where its loops and connections can be appreciated—logos, boutique branding, labels, café menus, invitations, and greeting cards. It also works well for pull quotes or social graphics that need a friendly handwritten tone, while very small sizes or dense paragraphs may lose clarity due to the tight joins and compact lowercase.
The font conveys a personable, upbeat tone with a lightly nostalgic, mid-century handwritten flavor. Its looping capitals and soft curves add charm and approachability, making it feel informal yet polished enough for display lines. The rhythm reads as conversational and friendly rather than ceremonial or rigid.
The design appears intended to mimic neat, practiced handwriting with connected cursive joins and decorative capitals, balancing legibility with charm. Its consistent stroke and rhythmic flow suggest a focus on smooth word shapes for expressive titles and brand-forward phrases rather than neutral body text.
Ascenders and descenders are long and expressive (notably in letters like f, g, j, and y), contributing to strong vertical movement in words. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with rounded shapes and simple, legible forms that match the script’s stroke behavior. The connected nature and decorative capitals make letterspacing-sensitive settings feel most natural when left to normal script flow rather than tight tracking.