Print Ofrig 16 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, album art, comics, game ui, quirky, handmade, playful, edgy, retro, hand-drawn charm, graphic punch, casual voice, edgy display, angular, facet-like, monoline, jagged, skewed.
A compact, forward-slanted handwritten print with monoline strokes and a distinctly angular, faceted construction. Curves are frequently broken into straight segments, creating crisp corners and a chiseled, polygonal feel in bowls and terminals. Stroke ends tend to be blunt with occasional hooked turns, and the rhythm is intentionally uneven, with slight variations in glyph widths and letter proportions that preserve a drawn-by-hand texture. Counters are generally open and simplified, and the overall spacing reads tight and economical, reinforcing the condensed, energetic silhouette.
Best suited to short bursts of text where personality matters: posters, packaging callouts, zines, album covers, comics, and playful game or app UI labels. It can work in longer lines when sizes are generous and line spacing is relaxed, but it reads strongest as a display face rather than a text workhorse.
The tone is informal and mischievous, with a scratchy, improvised confidence that feels like marker lettering or quick sign writing. Its angularity adds a slightly punky, edgy flavor, while the consistent slant keeps it lively and in motion.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of quick, hand-drawn print lettering while maintaining a cohesive, repeatable system. The faceted angles and steady slant suggest an intention to feel energetic and distinctive, with a slightly rough, graphic edge that stands out in headline settings.
Uppercase forms are bold and emblematic, while lowercase is more casual and bouncy, giving mixed-case settings a conversational, hand-lettered cadence. Numerals share the same broken-curve geometry, helping them blend smoothly into text and headlines without looking overly polished.