Script Fome 5 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: logos, posters, packaging, headlines, signage, retro, friendly, confident, playful, classic, display impact, hand-lettered feel, vintage appeal, brand voice, expressive rhythm, brushy, looped, swashy, rounded, calligraphic.
A bold, brush-script style with a steady rightward slant and smoothly tapered terminals. Strokes show rounded joins and soft, ink-like edges, with moderate thick–thin modulation that keeps counters open despite the heavy weight. Uppercase forms are compact and energetic with occasional entry/exit swashes, while lowercase maintains a bouncy baseline rhythm and relatively small internal spaces typical of brush lettering. Numerals match the cursive logic, leaning and flowing with similar stroke endings for consistent texture in text.
Best suited to logos, brand marks, and display typography where its bold brush texture and cursive motion can carry personality. It also works well for posters, packaging fronts, menus, and signage that benefit from a vintage, hand-lettered emphasis. For long passages or small UI text, it’s more effective as an accent or short callout than as body copy.
The overall tone feels upbeat and nostalgic, combining a confident headline presence with a casual, hand-lettered warmth. Its broad, rounded shapes and lively slant create an inviting, slightly theatrical feel that reads as vintage-inspired rather than formal or restrained.
Designed to deliver a bold, hand-lettered script look with strong contrast cues and smooth, continuous motion, prioritizing expressive word shapes and a confident display presence. The consistent slant and brush-like tapering suggest an intention to mimic sign-painting or marker/brush lettering in a polished, repeatable type system.
Word shapes become a strong graphic element at larger sizes, where the looping capitals and heavy stroke mass create a pronounced rhythm. In smaller settings the dense weight and tight inner counters may reduce clarity, especially in more complex lowercase sequences.