Script Hirin 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, quotes, posters, invitations, friendly, casual, retro, warm, upbeat, handwritten polish, friendly emphasis, display script, signature feel, connected, brushy, rounded, looping, smooth.
A connected, slanted script with smooth, brush-like strokes and rounded terminals. Letterforms show a steady cursive rhythm with generous curves, occasional looped ascenders/descenders, and clear joining behavior across lowercase. Strokes feel continuous and slightly calligraphic, with moderate gesture and a consistent, hand-drawn flow that keeps shapes legible while still expressive. Numerals follow the same cursive logic, leaning and simplifying into single-stroke forms that match the script’s movement.
Well-suited to branding and identity work that benefits from a human, approachable signature feel, such as boutique packaging, café menus, and lifestyle labels. It also performs well for short headlines, pull quotes, greeting cards, and invitation-style settings where an energetic cursive voice is desirable. For best results, use at medium to large sizes to let the joins and loops read cleanly.
The overall tone is personable and informal, evoking everyday handwriting with a polished, presentable finish. Its flowing joins and soft curves give it a welcoming, upbeat character with a lightly nostalgic, sign-painter/brush-script feel.
The design appears intended to deliver a smooth, connected handwriting look with enough refinement for display use. It balances expressive swashes in capitals with more restrained, readable lowercase forms, aiming for friendly emphasis without becoming overly ornate.
Capitals are more decorative and swashy than the lowercase, providing strong entry strokes and prominent curves that can stand alone in initials or short words. Spacing appears comfortable for continuous text, though the connected structure and strong slant make it most visually coherent when set in phrases rather than isolated letters.