Script Poly 5 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social media, stickers, playful, handmade, friendly, casual, bold, expressiveness, informality, impact, hand-lettering, brushy, rounded, bouncy, chunky, expressive.
A very heavy, brush-like script with rounded terminals and soft, slightly uneven contours that preserve a hand-drawn feel. Strokes show subtle swelling and tapering, with a generally forward-leaning, energetic rhythm and variable glyph widths that create a lively texture in words. Counters are compact and often partially closed by the thick stroke, while joins and curves stay smooth and blobby rather than sharp, giving the overall silhouette a chunky, inked look. Uppercase forms read as simplified, bold script caps; lowercase letters maintain a consistent slant and sit with a buoyant baseline tendency.
Well-suited to short, attention-grabbing copy such as posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and product labels where a bold handwritten voice is desirable. It works especially well for titles, quotes, and expressive phrases, and is less ideal for long passages of small body text due to its dense stroke weight and compact counters.
The font feels upbeat and approachable, like marker lettering made for fun, informal communication. Its weight and soft shapes give it a confident, friendly tone that reads as playful rather than formal or refined.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush/marker writing in a polished, repeatable form—prioritizing personality, warmth, and impact over strict regularity. It aims to deliver an expressive script look that remains legible in display settings while keeping the spontaneity of hand lettering.
At text sizes the thick strokes and tight internal spaces can reduce clarity in letters with small counters (for example forms like a/e/o), so it tends to read best when given enough size and breathing room. Numerals share the same brushy, rounded construction and visually match the alphabet for cohesive headlines and short callouts.