Script Ommep 13 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, invitations, social media, friendly, casual, lively, retro, personal, handwritten feel, brush script, approachability, energy, display legibility, brushy, monolinear, slanted, rounded, bouncy.
A slanted, brush-pen styled script with smooth, rounded terminals and moderately consistent stroke thickness. Letterforms are compact and slightly tall in proportion, with a relatively low x-height and pronounced ascenders and descenders that give lines a lively vertical rhythm. Strokes show gentle tapering at entries and exits, and many shapes lean on oval counters and soft curves rather than sharp angles. The overall texture is energetic yet controlled, with readable forms that keep a handwritten looseness without excessive flourishes.
Well-suited for short to medium display text where a friendly handwritten voice is desired—logos, product packaging, café/food branding, event invites, and promotional headlines. It can also work for pull quotes or social graphics when set with enough size and line spacing to preserve clarity.
The font feels personable and upbeat, like quick, confident handwriting done with a felt-tip or brush pen. Its bounce and slant convey warmth and informality, while the clean, smooth outlines keep it polished enough for display use. The tone lands between playful and nostalgic, making it approachable rather than formal.
Designed to emulate confident brush handwriting with a clean digital finish—prioritizing personality and motion over strict uniformity. The compact proportions and flowing stroke joins aim to produce a lively, continuous rhythm in words, making it effective for expressive, human-centered messaging.
Uppercase characters read as simplified, script-like caps with a consistent forward lean and occasional looped strokes (notably in forms like J and Q). Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with open, rounded shapes and a slightly casual rhythm that matches the alphabet. Spacing appears naturally uneven in a handwriting-like way, helping avoid a rigid, mechanical texture in longer text.