Script Fylu 8 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, headlines, quotes, vintage, friendly, lively, confident, playful, expressiveness, handmade feel, display impact, retro flavor, approachability, brushy, swashy, rounded, slanted, calligraphic.
A slanted, brush-script design with thick, rounded strokes and softly tapered terminals that suggest a pressure-driven tool. Letterforms show gentle entry/exit strokes and occasional small swashes, with a consistent rightward lean and a smooth, continuous rhythm in words. Curves are full and slightly compressed, counters are compact, and joins feel fluid rather than sharply segmented. The numerals are similarly brushy and curvilinear, maintaining the same stroke weight and lively baseline movement as the letters.
This font suits short to medium-length display settings where an expressive handwritten voice is desired, such as logos, product packaging, café/retail signage, posters, invitations, and pull quotes. It performs best at larger sizes where the brushy joins and compact counters remain crisp and the swashier capitals can add character without crowding.
The overall tone is warm and expressive, with a casual confidence that reads as personable and upbeat. Its energetic brush texture and flowing motion give it a slightly retro, sign-painter flavor while remaining approachable and informal.
The design appears intended to capture a polished handwritten look—more refined than casual marker writing—by combining brush-like weight with controlled, repeatable forms. Its goal seems to be delivering energetic, friendly display typography that feels crafted and personal while staying readable in typical headline use.
Capitals are prominent and decorative without becoming overly ornate, pairing well with the simpler lowercase for clear word shapes. The texture stays relatively even across the alphabet, with just enough stroke variation and terminal flicks to keep the script feeling hand-rendered rather than mechanical.