Script Pyha 2 is a bold, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, packaging, logos, greeting cards, social posts, playful, whimsical, crafty, friendly, retro, hand-lettering, casual elegance, expressive display, craft branding, brushy, rounded, bouncy, looped, quirky.
A brush-like script with a lively, uneven rhythm and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes are mostly upright with rounded terminals, occasional tapered entry/exit flicks, and soft, inked-in counters that give letters a slightly blobby texture. Proportions are compact and tall, with small interior bowls and looped forms in letters like g, y, and j; capitals are simplified but bold and gestural, reading as hand-painted forms rather than formal calligraphy. Overall spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an organic, handwritten cadence.
Best suited for short-form display settings where its bold brush texture and looping forms can stay legible—branding marks, product packaging, café menus, invitations, and social graphics. It can work for pull quotes or headers, but longer paragraphs may feel busy due to the strong contrast and irregular rhythm.
The font conveys an informal, cheerful tone with a hand-drawn charm. Its bouncy curves and inky weight changes feel crafty and personable, leaning toward a playful, boutique sensibility rather than a polished, ceremonial script.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering with an approachable personality, combining chunky downstrokes with light connecting strokes to suggest speed and spontaneity while still reading clearly in display sizes.
The heaviest strokes create strong spot-color, while thin connectors and hairlines add sparkle but can become delicate at smaller sizes. Some joins are only loosely connected, so the texture alternates between connected-script flow and near-print separation depending on the letter pair.