Script Opmid 13 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, invitations, packaging, posters, social media, elegant, romantic, vintage, friendly, celebratory, hand-lettered feel, display impact, warm charm, brand personality, brushy, looping, swashy, calligraphic, rounded.
A flowing brush-script with a pronounced rightward slant and energetic, looped construction. Strokes show strong thick–thin modulation, with rounded terminals and occasional tapered entries that mimic a pressure-sensitive brush or pen. Letterforms are compact and bouncy, with tight counters and frequent joining behavior in the sample text, while capitals introduce broader curves and modest swashes that add emphasis without becoming overly ornate. Overall spacing feels lively and slightly irregular in a hand-drawn way, supporting an expressive rhythm more than rigid uniformity.
Best suited to display applications where expressive handwriting is desired: logos and wordmarks, event invitations, greeting cards, product packaging, café or boutique signage, and promotional headlines. It also works well for short callouts, quotes, and date-driven designs where the numerals need to match the script tone.
The font conveys a warm, celebratory elegance—polished enough for special-occasion messaging but still personable and informal due to its brushy texture and buoyant movement. Its looping forms and soft terminals lean romantic and nostalgic, evoking classic sign-painting and greeting-card script.
Designed to replicate a confident, hand-lettered brush script that feels festive and personable while maintaining clear, repeatable forms for consistent branding. The intent appears to balance decorative flourish with readability for prominent, short-form text.
Uppercase shapes are noticeably more decorative than the lowercase, providing strong initial-letter presence for names and short headlines. Numerals follow the same slanted, brush-like logic with rounded forms, making them visually consistent for dates and pricing, though the overall style favors display sizes over long passages.