Script Buloz 6 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, headlines, posters, logos, quotes, playful, friendly, handmade, casual, retro, handmade feel, friendly tone, display impact, casual charm, rounded, bouncy, monoline-ish, brushy, quirky.
A compact, handwritten script with rounded terminals and a brush-pen feel. Strokes are mostly smooth and continuous, with gently swelling curves and occasional tapered joins that suggest quick, confident lettering. Letterforms are tall and condensed overall, with relatively small lowercase bodies and prominent ascenders/descenders, creating a lively vertical rhythm. Counters tend to be narrow and enclosed, and the numerals follow the same narrow, slightly irregular hand-drawn logic for a cohesive texture in mixed text.
Well suited to short-to-medium display settings such as packaging, café menus, greeting cards, posters, social graphics, and logo wordmarks where a friendly handwritten voice is desired. It can also work for pull quotes or section titles, especially when paired with a simpler text face for body copy.
The font reads as warm and personable, like neat marker lettering used on labels or handmade signage. Its tight proportions and bouncy curves give it a playful, upbeat tone, while the consistent stroke energy keeps it from feeling overly formal. Overall it conveys an approachable, crafty charm with a lightly vintage, pen-and-ink character.
Likely designed to emulate condensed brush-script handwriting that feels personal and crafted, balancing legibility with an expressive, hand-drawn rhythm. The goal appears to be a distinctive display script that remains cohesive across cases and numerals while retaining natural, human variation.
Spacing appears compact, and the condensed shapes create a strong, dark text color that stands out well in short lines. Several forms use looped constructions (notably in letters like g, y, and f), adding decorative motion without heavy flourishes. The texture remains intentionally imperfect, preserving a natural hand-lettered cadence across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.