Script Faho 10 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: logos, headlines, posters, packaging, signage, playful, retro, friendly, bouncy, chunky, display impact, friendly branding, retro flavor, handmade charm, rounded, soft, brushy, swashy, looped.
A very heavy, slanted script with soft, rounded terminals and brush-like swelling that creates a smooth, blobby silhouette. Strokes are tightly connected with generous joins, producing compact counters and a continuous, flowing rhythm. Letterforms lean consistently and use prominent entry/exit strokes, with occasional looped or swashed shapes that add variety while keeping a cohesive, handwritten feel. Figures are similarly weighty and rounded, matching the letterforms’ soft geometry and emphasizing bold, filled-in forms over fine detail.
This style is well-suited to logo wordmarks, bold headlines, posters, and playful packaging where a strong, friendly script can carry the design. It also works nicely for signage, social graphics, and promotional lines that benefit from a thick, high-impact handwritten look.
The overall tone is upbeat and nostalgic, with a cozy, confectionary feel that reads as informal and welcoming. Its buoyant curves and thick, rounded strokes convey warmth and fun, leaning toward a vintage sign-painting and mid-century display mood rather than formal calligraphy.
The design appears intended as a display script that delivers maximum presence with soft, rounded strokes and an energetic, connected flow. Its emphasis on weight, smooth curves, and expressive joins suggests a goal of creating a charming, retro-leaning handwritten voice for branding and attention-grabbing titles.
Because of the dense weight and compact counters, the font reads best when given room to breathe—slightly larger sizes and a touch of extra spacing help preserve clarity in crowded words. The strong slant and continuous connections create a lively texture that becomes a dominant visual element in paragraphs, making it more suitable for short-to-medium phrases than long-form reading.