Spooky Omwy 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween, posters, game ui, album art, ominous, witchy, eerie, grungy, hand-drawn, spooky branding, hand-inked feel, dramatic titling, seasonal display, dripping, scratchy, tapered, jagged, inked.
A condensed, slanted display face with a brush-script foundation and deliberately rough finishing. Strokes show tapered entries and exits, with frequent hook-like terminals and occasional blobbed or frayed ends that read as drips or ink buildup. The letterforms lean forward with an energetic, uneven rhythm; counters are small and sometimes partially pinched, and curves often break into sharp points. Spacing and widths vary noticeably between glyphs, reinforcing an improvised, hand-rendered texture rather than a strictly uniform system.
Best suited to headlines and short bursts of copy where the dripping, scratchy texture can be read clearly—such as horror posters, Halloween promotions, haunted-attraction branding, streaming thumbnails, or game/UI titling. It can also work for packaging or merch graphics that benefit from a hand-inked, spooky display voice rather than long-form readability.
The overall tone is dark and theatrical, evoking spooky signage and horror titling through its scratchy edges and dripping terminals. It feels mischievous and unsettling rather than purely aggressive, with a playful “haunted” flair that suits dramatic, seasonal, or occult-leaning themes.
This font appears designed to merge a fast, handwritten brush feel with horror-inspired distressing—using tapered strokes, sharp hooks, and drip-like terminals to signal “spooky” immediately. The condensed, forward-leaning construction helps it stack tightly in titles while keeping an animated, restless texture.
Capitals are more expressive and gestural, with tall ascenders, swooping hooks, and occasional exaggerated diagonals that create a lively headline presence. Numerals and punctuation inherit the same distressed, inky finishing, so the texture stays consistent across mixed text. At smaller sizes the interior detail and frayed ends can visually close up, while at larger sizes the brush texture becomes a defining feature.