Script Panew 12 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logotypes, headlines, packaging, posters, signage, retro, friendly, playful, casual, bold, impact, handmade feel, retro flavor, quick readability, brushy, rounded, bouncy, swashy, connected.
A bold, brush-script design with rounded terminals, smooth curves, and a lively rightward slant. Strokes show a hand-drawn, marker-like consistency with gentle thick–thin modulation and soft entry/exit flicks that create a flowing rhythm. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed with a bouncy baseline feel; capitals carry modest swashes and looped construction while lowercase maintains mostly connected cursive forms. Numerals are similarly slanted and weighty, matching the script’s energetic, inked-in texture.
Well-suited for logos, headlines, and short emphatic phrases where a bold, handwritten voice is desirable. It can work effectively on posters, packaging, menus, and signage that benefit from a friendly retro-script look. Best used at medium to large sizes to preserve the internal counters and join details.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, evoking mid-century sign painting and casual display lettering. Its heavy, rounded forms feel friendly and confident, with enough flourish to read as expressive without becoming ornate. The rhythm suggests motion and spontaneity, making text feel personable and conversational.
The design appears intended to deliver a confident brush-script look that reads quickly while still feeling handcrafted. Its compact proportions and strong ink coverage aim for high impact in display settings, while the controlled slant and consistent joins keep words coherent in short lines of text.
Caps and lowercase share a consistent brush angle and stroke ending behavior, helping mixed-case words feel cohesive. Some letters show distinctive looped or hook-like joins that add character and reinforce the handwritten impression. The dense color and compact shapes favor display sizing over long passages.