Script Opkoj 7 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, packaging, headlines, posters, invitations, friendly, energetic, casual, retro, approachable, handwritten feel, display impact, personal tone, headline flair, brand warmth, brushy, rounded terminals, smooth curves, soft tapering, looped capitals.
The design is a right-leaning, brush-pen style script with smooth, continuous curves and softly tapered ends. Strokes are weighty and rounded, with gentle modulation that suggests pressure changes, and the rhythm stays consistent across uppercase and lowercase. Letterforms are compact in the vertical direction with a relatively low lowercase body, while capitals are larger and more expressive, featuring occasional swashes and looped entries. Spacing appears naturally handwritten, with some letters feeling narrower or wider depending on their shapes, reinforcing an organic flow.
It suits short-to-medium display copy where a personal, dynamic voice is helpful—logos, packaging, café/food branding, event promos, invitations, and social media graphics. It can also work for pull quotes and section headers when paired with a simpler text face for body copy, as the expressive capitals and brushy weight are most effective when given room to breathe.
This script carries a friendly, upbeat tone with a touch of retro charm. Its confident slant and rounded, brushy terminals feel personable and energetic rather than formal or ceremonial. The overall impression is warm and inviting, like quick but practiced handwriting used for emphasis.
This font appears intended to emulate confident, brush-written lettering that remains legible at display sizes. The slanted construction and rounded, pressure-like stroke behavior aim to deliver a lively handwritten character while keeping forms clean and repeatable for consistent setting.
The sample text shows strong word-shape clarity and smooth joins, with capitals providing most of the personality through broader curves and occasional flourish. Numerals match the slanted, handwritten texture and look best when used as part of headings or labels rather than dense tabular settings.