Script Ohdu 2 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, social media, retro, confident, playful, warm, lively, hand-lettered look, display impact, signature feel, retro appeal, brushy, looping, swashy, rounded, compact.
A bold, brush-like script with a strong rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes show smooth, calligraphic modulation with rounded terminals and occasional tapered entries, giving characters a painted rhythm rather than a monoline feel. Letterforms are generally connected in text, with generous bowls, tight internal counters, and frequent looped joins; capitals introduce broader, more decorative gestures without becoming overly intricate. Numerals and punctuation follow the same flowing, slightly compressed structure, maintaining consistent weight and a cohesive baseline movement.
Well suited to short, prominent text such as headlines, posters, and promotional graphics where the bold script texture can carry the layout. It can also work for branding and packaging that want a handcrafted, retro-leaning signature feel, and for social media graphics where immediate impact matters.
The font reads as energetic and personable, with a vintage show-card spirit and a confident, headline-forward voice. Its boldness and fluid motion lend it a friendly exuberance that feels promotional and expressive rather than formal or delicate.
The design appears intended to emulate bold hand-lettered brush script for attention-grabbing display typography, balancing readable cursive structure with decorative, looping movement. It prioritizes visual momentum and presence, making it effective as a stylized voice for expressive, brand-forward messaging.
At display sizes the dense weight and compact counters create strong color and impact; in longer passages, the tight interiors and heavy joins can visually merge, especially in darker text blocks. The most distinctive character comes from the rounded brush turns and the rhythmic, looping connections across words.