Script Fofo 10 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, logos, packaging, posters, signage, retro, luxurious, romantic, confident, playful, display impact, vintage flair, brand charm, handcrafted feel, headline emphasis, brushy, swashy, rounded, looping, calligraphic.
A bold, right-leaning script with thick, brush-like strokes and pronounced swelling at curves and terminals. Forms are highly rounded with generous loops and teardrop/ball-like endings, giving the letters a smooth, sculpted silhouette. Uppercase characters are particularly expressive, with broad entry strokes and occasional swash-like turns, while lowercase maintains a steady cursive rhythm with compact counters and a relatively low x-height. Numerals follow the same flowing, calligraphic logic, staying weighty and strongly italicized for a cohesive texture in text.
This font is best suited to display settings where its bold cursive motion can lead the eye—logos and wordmarks, product packaging, poster titles, storefront or menu signage, and prominent pull quotes. It works especially well when you want a nostalgic, handcrafted feel with a premium sheen, and when set with enough size and breathing room to preserve the internal shapes.
The overall tone feels vintage and showy, mixing a sign-painting warmth with a more polished, upscale finish. Its heavy presence reads confident and celebratory, with a romantic, classic flourish that adds personality and motion to headlines.
The design appears intended to capture a formal brush-script look with high-impact weight and a classic, retro sensibility. It prioritizes flourish, momentum, and strong silhouette for memorable display typography rather than quiet, continuous reading.
Because of the dense stroke weight and compact interior spaces, spacing and size choices matter: the design creates a dark, continuous texture and can feel tight in longer passages. The slanted rhythm and rounded terminals help keep it friendly despite the strong weight, and the ornate capitals naturally draw attention at line starts.