Print Osdup 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, greeting cards, friendly, casual, expressive, lively, approachable, handwritten feel, casual voice, friendly display, human warmth, brushed, calligraphic, tapered, loose, monoline-ish.
A slanted, hand-drawn print style with brisk, brush-like strokes and gently tapered terminals. Forms are generally narrow with variable glyph widths and a buoyant baseline rhythm, giving the alphabet an easy, informal flow without connecting letters. Stroke contrast is moderate, with subtle thick–thin shifts that suggest pressure changes rather than rigid pen geometry. Counters are open and rounded, while ascenders and descenders are long and fluid, contributing to a slightly airy texture in text.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where a personal, informal voice is desired—posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, invitations, and greeting card messaging. It can work for brief UI or editorial accents, but the lively stroke behavior and narrow proportions are most effective when given room and size.
The overall tone is warm and personable—more like quick, confident handwriting than formal calligraphy. Its energetic slant and soft curves read as friendly and conversational, with enough character to feel human and spontaneous while staying coherent across longer lines.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of handwritten marker or brush lettering in a tidy, non-connecting print form. It balances expressive stroke movement with consistent proportions so it can deliver a casual, human tone while remaining readable in typical headline and tagline settings.
Uppercase shapes lean toward simplified, handwritten constructions, while lowercase shows more gesture and variation, creating a naturally mixed-case voice. Numerals follow the same brisk, brushed logic, with rounded forms and occasional flourished hooks that add charm in display sizes.