Script Onbab 15 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, packaging, posters, social media, energetic, friendly, retro, confident, expressive, hand-lettered feel, brand voice, display impact, signature style, brushy, connected, slanted, rounded, loopy.
A lively, brush-driven script with a consistent rightward slant and smoothly connected strokes in the lowercase. The forms show tapered stroke endings and occasional thicker downstrokes, suggesting a marker or brush-pen rhythm rather than a rigid calligraphic construction. Capitals are more standalone and gestural, with broad, sweeping entry strokes and rounded terminals that keep the overall texture soft. Letter widths vary naturally, creating an animated word shape and a flowing baseline movement, while numerals follow the same handwritten logic with curved, slightly bouncy figures.
Best suited to display settings where its brushy movement and connected cursive can be appreciated—such as branding, logo lockups, packaging titles, posters, and social graphics. It also works well for short quotes, invitations, and emphasis lines, while long body copy may feel dense due to its strong stroke presence and continuous script joins.
The tone is upbeat and personable, with an expressive, signature-like presence that feels casual but deliberate. Its bold, sweeping motion reads as confident and attention-getting, lending a slightly retro, hand-lettered flavor to headlines and short statements.
Designed to emulate fast, confident hand-lettering with a brush-pen feel, prioritizing momentum, expressiveness, and a distinctive signature-like silhouette. The letterforms aim for readability at display sizes while keeping the natural variation and flourish typical of casual script branding.
In continuous text the joins and slant create strong horizontal momentum, and the rounded terminals help prevent the heavy strokes from feeling harsh. The uppercase set is especially decorative and works best when it can breathe, while the lowercase maintains a more consistent cursive flow for wordmarks and phrases.