Script Erje 3 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, posters, headlines, packaging, signage, retro, confident, playful, energetic, classic, display impact, handmade feel, vintage flavor, headline clarity, expressive motion, brushy, swashy, slanted, looped, rounded.
A very heavy, right-slanted script with a brush-like construction and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes end in tapered, wedge-shaped terminals and occasional swashy flicks, creating a lively rhythm and strong forward motion. Letterforms are compact in the lowercase with small counters, while capitals are larger and more embellished, featuring looped entries and broad, sculpted curves. Overall spacing feels tight and cohesive, with forms designed to read as a unified, flowing hand despite mostly discrete glyph shapes in the set display.
Best suited to short, prominent text such as logos, branding lockups, poster headlines, packaging titles, and signage where its bold script personality can lead the composition. It can work for punchy subheads or pull quotes, but the dense weight and tight counters make it less ideal for long passages or small sizes.
The font conveys a bold, showy handwriting tone that feels vintage and expressive. Its strong slant and punchy stroke weight create a sense of speed and confidence, while the rounded curves and occasional flourishes add charm and friendliness. The overall impression is classic display script—attention-grabbing without becoming overly delicate.
The design appears intended to emulate a confident brush-lettered script for display settings, combining strong contrast, a pronounced italic angle, and selective swashes to create immediate impact. It prioritizes visual flair and rhythm over neutrality, aiming for a classic, retro-leaning handwritten feel that remains legible in bold applications.
Numerals follow the same brush-script logic with hefty bodies and angled, calligraphic terminals, helping maintain a consistent texture in mixed text. The sample text shows strong word-shape continuity and a dense typographic color, suggesting best use where the dramatic stroke contrast can remain crisp at display sizes.