Script Eslab 13 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, headlines, social media, friendly, lively, casual, retro, confident, hand-lettered feel, expressive display, brush script, warm tone, quick rhythm, brushy, rounded, slanted, monoline-ish, bouncy.
This script face has a brisk rightward slant and a brush-pen construction with rounded terminals and softly swelling strokes. Letterforms are compact and upright in their overall footprint, with tight counters and a generally narrow set that keeps words dense and energetic. Strokes show subtle thickness variation and occasional tapered entries/exits, giving a painted rhythm rather than a rigid calligraphic one. The lowercase is small relative to the capitals, and spacing is designed to read as a continuous handwritten line even where forms are not fully connected.
Best suited to display applications such as logos, product packaging, cafe or boutique signage, posters, and short headlines where a friendly handwritten voice is desired. It also works well for social media graphics, invitations, and quote treatments when set with generous size and line spacing to maintain clarity.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, like quick hand-lettering made with a confident marker or brush. It conveys warmth and momentum, balancing casual informality with enough consistency to feel purposeful rather than messy. The bouncy rhythm and rounded shapes lend a slightly nostalgic, sign-painting flavor.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident brush lettering in a clean, repeatable digital form. It prioritizes personality and momentum through slant, rounded brush terminals, and compact proportions, aiming for an expressive script look that remains legible in bold headline use.
Capitals are simple and gestural, designed to sit comfortably next to the lowercase without excessive flourishes. Numerals follow the same brushy logic, with smooth curves and compact proportions that suit display settings. In longer text, the heavy strokes and tight internal spaces make it most effective at larger sizes where the brush texture and counters can breathe.