Script Efbev 9 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, headlines, invites, social posts, friendly, retro, casual, warm, lively, handwritten charm, casual elegance, display readability, friendly voice, brushy, looping, slanted, rounded, bouncy.
A slanted, brush-like script with smooth, rounded forms and softly tapered stroke ends. Letterforms show a rhythmic, handwritten bounce with modest baseline variation and gently swelling downstrokes, creating a natural pen-pressure feel without sharp contrast. Many lowercase characters connect or nearly connect, while capitals are more open and simplified, leaning into legibility rather than ornate flourishes. Counters are compact and the overall fit feels tight, with occasional extended loops (notably in g, y, and f) that add movement without becoming overly decorative.
Well-suited to short display settings where a friendly handwritten voice is desired, such as branding accents, packaging labels, café/food messaging, invitations, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It can also work for pull quotes or subheads when generous line spacing is available to accommodate the loops and descenders.
The tone is personable and upbeat, evoking quick, confident handwriting with a polished finish. It reads as approachable and slightly nostalgic—more “hand-signed note” than formal calligraphy—making it feel warm, informal, and energetic.
The design appears intended to deliver a readable, everyday script with a brush-pen cadence—capturing the speed and charm of handwriting while keeping shapes consistent for repeatable typesetting. Its restrained ornament and compact proportions suggest a focus on versatile display use rather than highly formal calligraphic expression.
Numerals are cursive-leaning and consistent with the script rhythm, with rounded shapes and simple terminals that keep them readable in short strings. Stroke edges appear smooth and ink-like rather than textured, giving the face a clean, modern reproduction of handwriting. Capital letters maintain the same slant and stroke behavior as the lowercase, supporting cohesive mixed-case settings.