Script Ognuf 13 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logo design, packaging, posters, social media, confident, friendly, retro, lively, casual, hand-lettered feel, display impact, brand warmth, expressive caps, brushy, rounded, looped, dynamic, slanted.
A brush-pen script with a consistent rightward slant and energetic, sweeping entry and exit strokes. Letterforms are rounded and compact with a relatively low lowercase height, plus generous loops in ascenders/descenders and occasional terminal curls. Strokes show clear pen pressure behavior—thick main strokes with tapered hairline joins—creating an even rhythm that still feels hand-made. Capitals are more ornate and gestural, while lowercase maintains a tighter, more repetitive structure for steady word shapes.
Best suited to short, display-driven text where its bold brush texture and looping forms can stand out—such as logos, product packaging, poster headlines, and social media graphics. It also works well for quotes or callouts when set with comfortable tracking and line spacing to avoid crowding in the joins and swashes.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, balancing a polished script feel with the spontaneity of marker lettering. It reads as warm and confident rather than delicate, suggesting a contemporary take on mid-century sign and packaging script. The heavy presence and lively curves give it a cheerful, attention-getting voice.
Designed to deliver a hand-lettered brush-script look with strong contrast and flowing connections, emphasizing speed, confidence, and readability at display sizes. The set appears aimed at providing expressive capitals and a cohesive, rhythmically consistent lowercase for branding and promotional typography.
Spacing appears naturally irregular in a handwritten way, with widths varying noticeably between characters to preserve a drawn rhythm. Many letters include built-in connecting strokes, and several capitals feature prominent loops and swashes that can create dense areas in tightly set words. Numerals follow the same brush logic with rounded forms and strong diagonals, matching the letters in weight and movement.