Cursive Opboh 10 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, wedding, branding, packaging, headlines, elegant, airy, delicate, romantic, refined, elegance, display script, signature feel, fine-pen look, romantic tone, monoline, hairline, loopy, swashy, calligraphic.
A delicate cursive script with hairline strokes, a consistent rightward slant, and generous, looping ascenders and descenders. Letterforms are narrow and tall, with a very small x-height that emphasizes long stems and extended entry/exit strokes. Stroke behavior is smooth and continuous with subtle contrast from curvature and pressure-like modulation, and many capitals feature restrained swashes that add height and flourish without heavy ornament. Spacing is open and the rhythm is light, giving words a floating, handwritten line quality rather than a dense texture.
Well-suited for wedding suites, invitations, greeting cards, and other formal personal stationery where an elegant handwritten voice is desired. It also works effectively for beauty, jewelry, or boutique branding, as well as packaging and short headlines where its airy line and expressive capitals can take center stage. For best results, use at larger sizes and avoid long small-text passages.
The overall tone is graceful and intimate, combining a fine-pen delicacy with a poised, formal charm. Its slender, looping movement reads as romantic and stylish, with a calm sophistication suited to sentimental or celebratory messaging.
The design appears intended to emulate refined, fine-nib handwriting: light, looping, and gracefully slanted, with heightened verticality and decorative capitals for display emphasis. It prioritizes elegance and gesture over dense readability, aiming to create a signature-like, premium feel in short phrases and titles.
Capitals are noticeably more decorative and taller than the lowercase, creating strong word-shape contrast in title case. Numerals follow the same thin, handwritten logic and feel best when treated as an accent rather than the main content. The extremely fine strokes and small lowercase bodies suggest it will need sufficient size and contrast against the background to remain crisp.