Script Efnot 1 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, posters, packaging, headlines, social media, retro, playful, friendly, handmade, lively, expressiveness, handmade feel, display impact, vintage flair, informal branding, brushy, bouncy, rounded, looping, casual.
A slanted, brush-like script with rounded terminals and a smooth, continuous rhythm. Strokes show calligraphic modulation, with thicker downstrokes and lighter connecting turns, giving a confident handwritten feel. Letterforms are compact and upright in their internal structure but consistently forward-leaning, with narrow proportions and tight counters that keep words dense. Ascenders and descenders are long and looped (notably in g, j, y), while joins and entry/exit strokes are soft and tapered, producing fluid word shapes even when characters are not strictly connected in all cases.
This font is well suited to short, punchy settings where personality matters: logos, product packaging, café or boutique branding, promotional posters, and social media graphics. It also works effectively for titles, pull quotes, and display lines where the bold brush texture can act as a visual anchor. For longer passages, it benefits from larger sizes and extra leading to keep the looping forms open.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, like quick marker lettering refined into a consistent style. It suggests a casual retro sensibility—approachable, slightly cheeky, and energetic—without feeling messy. The lively curves and looping descenders add charm and motion, making the font feel conversational and expressive.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush handwriting while maintaining repeatable consistency across a full alphabet and figures. Its narrow, forward-leaning construction and looping extenders aim to create energetic word silhouettes that feel informal yet controlled for display use.
Capitals are simplified and brush-script-like, with occasional swashy gestures that stand out as word-initial accents. The numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with rounded forms and a slightly varied baseline feel that reinforces the crafted character. In longer text, the dense spacing and strong stroke weight create a prominent texture that reads best with generous line spacing.