Script Opbew 15 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, logotypes, packaging, headlines, elegant, romantic, friendly, vintage, confident, brush lettering, signature style, decorative caps, display emphasis, brushy, looping, swashy, rounded, calligraphic.
A slanted, brush-script style with connected lowercase and occasional joining behavior in the sample text, built from rounded forms and soft, tapered stroke endings. Strokes show a smooth, medium-contrast rhythm suggestive of pressure variation, with thicker downstrokes and lighter entry/exit strokes. Capitals are more ornamental and open, with modest swashes and looped terminals (notably in letters like Q, R, and S), while the lowercase keeps a compact, bouncy baseline rhythm and relatively tall ascenders/descenders. Numerals are cursive-like and consistent with the letterforms, maintaining the same slant and stroke modulation.
Well-suited to wedding and event invitations, boutique branding, product packaging, and short headlines where an expressive script voice is desired. It works especially well for names, taglines, and prominent display text that can take advantage of the swashy capitals and flowing connections.
The overall tone feels polished and personable—formal enough for special-occasion typography, yet warm and approachable due to the rounded brush motion and lively curves. The italic lean and swashy capitals add a classic, slightly vintage flourish that reads as celebratory and expressive rather than strictly businesslike.
The font appears designed to emulate confident brush lettering with a refined, calligraphic finish—balancing decorative capitals with a more streamlined lowercase for readable, continuous script in display contexts.
The design relies on smooth curves and rounded joins, with generous counters in many letters to keep the texture from becoming overly dense at display sizes. Capital forms stand out clearly from the lowercase, giving headlines a signature-like emphasis, while the compact lowercase encourages a continuous, handwritten flow.