Script Novo 7 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, headlines, quotes, casual, energetic, personal, retro, confident, expressiveness, handwritten realism, brand personality, brush lettering, display clarity, brushy, slanted, monoline-leaning, tapered ends, open counters.
A lively, brush-pen script with a consistent rightward slant and a smooth, continuous rhythm. Strokes show medium contrast with tapered starts and finishes, giving letters a painted, slightly calligraphic feel rather than a uniform marker line. Letterforms are compact and forward-leaning, with rounded bowls, open counters, and occasional extended entry/exit strokes that add motion. The texture remains clean and controlled, but retains small natural variations that read as hand-drawn.
Works best for short to medium display settings where personality is desired: logos and brand marks, product packaging, café or boutique signage, posters, social graphics, and pull quotes. It can also suit invitations and event titles when a modern handwritten touch is preferred over formal copperplate-style script.
The overall tone is friendly and expressive, like quick, confident handwriting made for display. It suggests an upbeat, informal sophistication—more polished than a casual scribble, but still relaxed and human. The slant and brushy terminals add momentum and a mildly vintage, sign-painting vibe.
The design appears intended to capture the speed and confidence of brush lettering while keeping letterforms legible and cohesive across a full alphabet and numerals. Its proportions and slant aim to create smooth word silhouettes and an energetic baseline flow suited to contemporary display typography.
Uppercase forms are more gestural and prominent, with sweeping curves and simplified construction that pairs well with the lowercase. Numerals follow the same brush-script logic, staying readable while keeping the forward motion and tapered terminals. Spacing in the samples appears set for flowing word shapes, emphasizing a connected-script impression even when joins are subtle.