Script Erho 7 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, packaging, headlines, posters, branding, retro, friendly, lively, expressive, elegant, display script, brush lettering, vintage feel, bold branding, decorative caps, swashy, rounded, looping, brushed, connected.
A bold, right-leaning script with a brush-like stroke model and rounded terminals. Letterforms are tightly set and compact, with smooth connecting strokes in the lowercase and generous entry/exit swashes that create a continuous rhythm across words. The texture alternates between thick main strokes and thinner joining hairlines, and many caps feature curled spurs and looped forms that read clearly at display sizes. Counters are small but well-shaped, and the overall silhouette is energetic and slightly condensed.
Works best for logos, wordmarks, product packaging, and punchy headlines where its bold script rhythm and swashy capitals can be featured. It also suits posters, menus, and social graphics that need a lively, retro-leaning handwritten voice, while longer text blocks will be more comfortable at larger sizes with added spacing.
The font conveys a vintage, sign-painter tone—confident, upbeat, and personable. Its flowing connections and pronounced swashes add a touch of showmanship, suggesting classic Americana, mid-century packaging, and cheerful editorial styling.
The design appears intended to emulate confident brush lettering with a polished, repeatable structure—delivering a bold, display-first script that feels hand-drawn yet consistent. Its emphasis on connected lowercase and decorative capitals suggests it was drawn to create memorable, energetic titles and branding lines.
Capitals are more ornamental than the lowercase, with several letters using dramatic curls and open loops that can become visually prominent in short words or initials. Numerals follow the same italic, brush-script logic and feel suited to headlines rather than dense data. The tight, dark color means it benefits from breathing room in tracking and line spacing, especially in longer phrases.