Print Oslip 8 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, quotes, posters, social media, casual, friendly, handwritten, lively, approachable, human warmth, casual display, handmade tone, quick readability, brushed, loose, rounded, bouncy, organic.
A slanted, handwritten print with a brushed-pen feel and gently tapering strokes. Forms are narrow and upright-leaning with softly rounded terminals and occasional flicks, giving letters a quick, single-pass construction. Curves are open and airy, counters are generous, and spacing stays even despite natural irregularities in stroke start/finish. Capitals are relatively tall and simple, while lowercase has modest extenders and a compact x-height that keeps the texture light.
This font suits friendly display copy such as greeting cards, gift tags, packaging callouts, café-style menus, posters, and short quote graphics. It performs best at headline and subhead sizes where the brushed details and handwritten rhythm can remain clear, and it can add an approachable accent to branding when used sparingly.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like neat handwriting used for notes or casual signage. Its rhythmic slant and soft terminals read as friendly and energetic without becoming chaotic, lending a warm, human presence to short messages.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of tidy, slightly stylized handwriting—clean enough to read quickly, but with enough stroke variation and slant to feel hand-made. It balances consistency with small natural quirks to keep text from looking mechanical.
The numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with smooth curves and slightly elastic proportions that match the alphabet. Stroke modulation is subtle but visible, suggesting pressure changes from a pen or brush rather than a rigid monoline tool.