Script Olri 2 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, packaging, posters, headlines, social media, retro, friendly, confident, playful, casual, display impact, branding, handmade feel, nostalgic tone, expressive script, brushy, rounded, swashy, connected, bouncy.
A heavy, right-leaning script with a brush-like stroke and rounded terminals. Letterforms are largely connected, with smooth joining strokes and occasional entry/exit swashes that keep the baseline rhythm lively. Counters are compact and teardrop-like, curves are generous, and the overall texture is dense and dark, giving short words a strong, graphic footprint. Uppercase forms read as embellished initials with looped shapes, while lowercase maintains a consistent cursive flow; numerals follow the same slanted, handwritten logic with simplified, sturdy shapes.
Well-suited for logos and wordmarks that benefit from a bold handwritten signature, as well as packaging, posters, and promotional headlines where a friendly, attention-grabbing script is needed. It also works well for short social media statements, invitations, and quote graphics when the goal is a casual, vintage-leaning flourish.
The font conveys a warm, upbeat personality—bold enough to feel assertive, yet soft and personable due to its rounded brush forms. Its flowing connections and swashy capitals add a touch of nostalgic charm, evoking classic sign-painting and mid-century display scripts rather than formal calligraphy.
The design appears intended as a bold brush script for display use, balancing continuous cursive connectivity with decorative capitals to create memorable word shapes. Its emphasis on dark color, smooth joins, and rounded swashes suggests a focus on expressive branding and punchy headline typography rather than extended text reading.
Spacing and joins favor continuous word shapes over isolated letter clarity, so the design reads best when set with comfortable tracking and moderate line lengths. The strong slant and thick strokes create a pronounced rhythm that can look energetic in headlines but may feel crowded at very small sizes or in long paragraphs.