Print Oskas 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, album art, energetic, casual, quirky, handmade, youthful, handmade feel, expressive display, fast lettering, casual branding, brushy, spiky, leaning, tall, airy.
A tall, sharply leaning handwritten print style with brisk, brush-like strokes and tapered terminals. Letterforms are narrow and vertically stretched, with a lively baseline and occasional angular kinks that suggest quick marker movement. Strokes show moderate thick–thin shifts, especially on downstrokes, while counters stay open and simplified. Lowercase is notably small relative to the capitals, reinforcing a sketchy, informal rhythm and a strong sense of forward motion.
Best suited for short, high-impact text where a handmade, energetic feel is desired—posters, display headlines, packaging accents, and social graphics. It can also work for branding or titling that benefits from a quick brush-pen personality, while long passages may feel busy due to the narrow forms and small lowercase presence.
The overall tone is energetic and spontaneous, like fast handwritten notes or a rough brush-lettered headline. It feels playful and slightly edgy, balancing friendliness with a pointed, gestural bite. The animation in the slant and the uneven rhythm gives it a personal, expressive voice rather than a polished calligraphic one.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of fast handwritten print lettering in a digital font: tall, slanted, and expressive, with brush-like modulation and deliberately imperfect rhythm. It prioritizes personality and motion over strict uniformity, aiming for a bold, informal display voice.
Capitals are prominent and attention-grabbing, while lowercase forms are compact and minimal, which can make mixed-case text read as cap-led. Numerals follow the same quick, narrow construction, with simple shapes and a handwritten tilt that matches the letters. Spacing appears intentionally loose in places, adding to the airy, improvisational texture.