Script Esgom 6 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, posters, headlines, packaging, social ads, expressive, bold, retro, confident, casual, impactful script, handwritten energy, signature feel, display emphasis, brushy, slanted, rounded, high-energy, dynamic.
A heavy, brush-like script with a pronounced rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes show rounded terminals and subtly tapered joins, suggesting a marker or brush pen with moderate pressure variation. Letterforms are tightly knit with a lively baseline bounce and irregular rhythm, and many shapes are simplified into strong, gestural silhouettes rather than delicate loops. Uppercase forms are showy and swashy, while lowercase stays compact with a short midline feel and occasional one-stroke constructions; numerals follow the same painted, handwritten logic.
Best suited for short, prominent text where its bold brush forms can read clearly—logos, poster headlines, packaging callouts, and social graphics. It can also work for punchy pull quotes or titles, while longer paragraphs benefit from generous sizing and spacing to keep the dense shapes from closing in.
The overall tone is energetic and personable, reading like fast, confident handwriting scaled up for display. Its bold presence and slightly irregular cadence give it a vintage sign-painter flavor while still feeling informal and spontaneous.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, handwritten signature feel with the impact of a display face—capturing brush-script momentum while staying dark and legible at headline sizes. The emphasis is on expressive stroke energy and compact, swashy capitals that create immediate personality.
Texture comes from small kinks and stroke swell at turns, which adds character but also makes counters and apertures relatively tight in smaller sizes. The set maintains consistent slant and stroke weight across caps, lowercase, and figures, helping it feel cohesive in longer phrases despite its expressive forms.