Script Afmol 10 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, quotes, social posts, branding, friendly, playful, personal, casual, warm, handwritten realism, approachability, casual elegance, expressive rhythm, friendly branding, rounded, looped, monoline-ish, brushy, bouncy.
A casual script with smooth, rounded forms and a gently brushy stroke that swells slightly on curves and terminals. Letters lean mostly upright and follow a lively baseline with subtle bounce, giving words an animated rhythm. Connections are fluid in the lowercase, with frequent loops and soft entry/exit strokes, while capitals are more open and simplified, pairing legibly with the lowercase. Counters are generous and shapes stay consistent across the set, with notable handwritten variance in widths and joins that keeps the texture organic rather than mechanical.
Well-suited to short-to-medium text where a handwritten feel is desirable, such as greeting cards, invitations with a casual tone, quotes and headings, social media graphics, product packaging, and small-scale branding accents. It works best when set with enough leading to accommodate the tall loops and descenders, and when used at sizes that let the joins stay clear.
The overall tone feels personable and upbeat, like neat marker lettering or a friendly note. Its looping joins and soft terminals create an approachable, informal charm that reads as conversational and crafted rather than formal or ceremonial.
Designed to emulate confident, everyday hand lettering with smooth connected strokes and a touch of flourish. The intent appears to balance charm and legibility, offering an informal script that feels crafted and lively while remaining readable in common headline and display contexts.
Ascenders and descenders are prominent and often looped (notably in letters like g, y, and f), adding decorative movement without becoming overly ornate. Numerals follow the same rounded, handwritten logic, with simple, open shapes that match the script’s stroke behavior. Spacing and joining produce a cohesive word shape in text, while the capitals provide clear starting anchors for titles and names.