Script Panem 3 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, headlines, friendly, retro, casual, lively, confident, handcrafted feel, display impact, approachability, expressive lettering, brushy, rounded, slanted, looped, bouncy.
A slanted, brush-pen style script with rounded terminals and a clearly calligraphic stroke that swells on curves and tapers into soft points. Letterforms show a lively, bouncy rhythm with slightly uneven widths and generous curves, giving the set a natural hand-drawn cadence while remaining consistent in stroke behavior. Capitals are prominent and gestural, with occasional looped entries and exits, while lowercase forms lean toward compact counters and simplified joins that keep words readable at display sizes. Numerals match the same brush logic, using curved strokes and open shapes that feel cohesive alongside the letters.
This style works best for short-to-medium display copy such as branding lines, product packaging, café or lifestyle signage, posters, and social graphics where a handcrafted voice is desired. It is less suited to dense body text, but performs well in quotes, titles, and callouts where expressive letterforms can carry the message.
The overall tone is warm and personable, with a spirited, vintage-leaning flair. It reads as expressive and informal rather than ceremonial, making text feel approachable, energetic, and handcrafted.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, confident brush lettering with a polished consistency—capturing the spontaneity of hand lettering while keeping forms stable enough for repeatable, logo-like use. Its emphasis on rounded strokes and energetic slant suggests a focus on warmth and impact in display settings.
Spacing appears moderately tight in running text, with frequent near-connections and overlaps that reinforce a handwritten flow even when glyphs are not strictly fully connected. The slant and stroke modulation create strong word shapes, and the heavier downstrokes give headings a punchy presence.