Script Pubog 10 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, headlines, greeting cards, social media, friendly, playful, handmade, casual, retro, handwritten feel, approachability, cheerful display, craft aesthetic, rounded, brushy, bouncy, loopy, inked.
A smooth, marker-like script with rounded terminals and a consistent, hand-drawn stroke that swells and tapers slightly through curves. Letterforms lean mostly upright and keep a compact footprint, with simple joins and occasional lifted connections that preserve a written rhythm without becoming fully continuous. Counters are soft and open, curves are generous, and ascenders/descenders are long and looped, giving the alphabet a lively vertical cadence. Numerals and capitals share the same brushy construction and simplified structure, staying legible while maintaining an informal handwritten texture.
Well-suited for short-to-medium headlines, product names, and brand marks that benefit from a personable handwritten voice. It also works nicely on packaging, invitations, greeting cards, and social graphics where a friendly, crafted feel is desired. For longer paragraphs, it’s best used with comfortable size and spacing to keep the lively forms easy to read.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with a buoyant, upbeat energy that feels personal and conversational. Its rounded loops and slightly irregular rhythm read as human and craft-forward rather than polished or corporate, lending a lighthearted, nostalgic charm.
The design appears intended to emulate a confident brush-pen hand with clean, rounded forms—capturing the charm of casual script while staying readable in display settings. Its compact structure and consistent stroke behavior suggest a focus on cheerful, everyday messaging and approachable branding.
The most distinctive features are the bold, rounded silhouettes, looped descenders (notably in letters like g, j, y), and a rhythm that alternates between connected and slightly separated strokes for clarity in longer text. Capitals are compact and friendly rather than ornate, helping headings feel emphatic without becoming formal.