Script Oglap 4 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, logotypes, packaging, headlines, elegant, classic, confident, warm, vintage, signature feel, decorative display, refined handwriting, celebratory tone, brand emphasis, brushy, looped, swashy, calligraphic, dynamic.
A flowing, right-leaning script with rounded forms and a brush-like stroke that swells and tapers, creating a lively baseline rhythm. Capitals are prominent and often built with open, looping entry strokes and subtle swashes, while lowercase letters stay compact with a comparatively low x-height and generous ascenders/descenders. Counters are mostly open and softly oval, terminals are rounded or slightly pointed, and joins appear smooth and cursive even when letters are not strictly connected in all contexts. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with curvy shapes and distinctive looped forms that match the alphabet’s movement.
Well-suited for display applications such as invitations, greeting cards, event materials, product packaging, and brand marks where an expressive handwritten signature look is desired. It performs best at medium to large sizes, especially in short headlines, names, and accent text where its loops and swashes can be appreciated.
The overall tone feels personable and polished, like a practiced signature—formal enough for invitations and branding, yet friendly and expressive. Its vintage-leaning brush script character suggests tradition, celebration, and a touch of romance without feeling overly delicate.
Designed to emulate a confident brush-pen script with a controlled, calligraphic flow, pairing decorative capitals with compact lowercase forms for legibility in display settings. The aim appears to be a versatile “signature” style that communicates warmth and refinement while maintaining strong visual presence.
The stroke texture reads as clean and consistent rather than rough, with clear directional stress that reinforces the handwritten feel. Spacing appears relatively open for a script, improving clarity in short phrases and display lines while preserving a natural cursive cadence.