Script Ohho 9 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, packaging, posters, logos, social media, friendly, retro, casual, playful, confident, expressive display, handwritten feel, branding impact, sign-painting tone, friendly tone, brushy, rounded, connected, bouncy, swashy.
A heavy, brush-like script with a consistent rightward slant and mostly connected letterforms. Strokes are rounded and bulb-ended, with gentle modulation that suggests pressure from a marker or brush rather than a sharp pen. The texture is smooth and inky, with compact counters and tight joins that create a dense, continuous rhythm. Capitals carry simple swash-like entry and exit strokes, while lowercase forms stay cohesive and cursive, keeping word shapes unified and energetic.
Best suited for short-to-medium display text such as branding marks, product packaging, café or boutique signage, posters, and social media graphics where a bold handwritten voice is desired. It can also work for invitations or event titles when a friendly script is needed, but it is most effective in larger sizes rather than dense body copy.
The font reads upbeat and personable, with a vintage sign-painting flavor and an easy, conversational tone. Its bold presence feels confident and inviting, leaning more toward fun and approachability than formality. The bouncy connections and rounded terminals add warmth, making it suited to expressive, human-centric messaging.
The design appears intended to mimic confident brush lettering in a streamlined, repeatable form: thick, rounded strokes, quick cursive joins, and slightly embellished capitals for emphasis. The goal seems to be an expressive script that delivers instant personality and strong visual impact in branding and promotional typography.
Numerals follow the same brush-script logic, with rounded forms and a slightly hand-drawn irregularity that keeps them lively in display settings. The overall color on the page is strong and dark, so spacing and line breaks will noticeably affect readability in longer passages; it performs best when given room to breathe.