Script Funeb 5 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, branding, packaging, posters, social graphics, retro, friendly, confident, playful, warm, display impact, handmade feel, retro branding, friendly tone, signage style, brushed, rounded, chunky, looping, swashy.
A heavy, right-slanted script with thick, rounded strokes and softly tapered terminals that suggest a brush or marker influence. Letterforms are compact and energetic, with broad curves, teardrop-like joins, and frequent entry/exit strokes that create a flowing rhythm even where characters are not strictly connected. Counters are relatively small and shapes are bulbous, giving the design a dense, poster-ready color. Capitals lean toward simplified, display-oriented forms with occasional swash-like hooks, while lowercase maintains consistent slant and robust weight for a unified texture.
Best suited for display typography such as headlines, logos, product packaging, posters, and social media graphics where the bold script personality can carry the message. It works well for short to medium text strings—taglines, menu headings, labels, and promotional callouts—especially when a retro, hand-crafted feel is desired.
The overall tone feels upbeat and personable, with a vintage sign-painting flavor and a bold, self-assured presence. Its rounded forms and lively motion read as inviting rather than formal, lending a nostalgic, mid-century friendliness to headlines and short statements.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, hand-written script look with strong visual impact and a smooth, brush-like cadence. Its emphasis on rounded weight, slanted momentum, and playful hooks suggests a focus on expressive branding and attention-grabbing display typography rather than long-form reading.
Numerals and punctuation match the script’s heavy, rounded construction, maintaining consistent slant and stroke endings. The italic angle and strong stroke mass can reduce clarity at very small sizes, but the exaggerated curves and distinctive silhouettes help keep words recognizable in display settings.