Print Opry 12 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, sports branding, energetic, casual, sporty, retro, friendly, handwritten energy, display impact, casual branding, quick lettering, brushy, slanted, rounded, high-contrast stress, tapered terminals.
A lively brush-script print with a consistent rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes show clear pressure modulation—thicker downstrokes and slimmer connecting strokes—with tapered, occasionally wedge-like terminals that mimic a felt-tip or brush marker. Letterforms are open and rounded with simplified curves, and spacing is somewhat irregular in a natural, handwritten way, giving lines a bouncy rhythm. The figures follow the same angled, stroke-driven construction, reading like hand-drawn numerals rather than geometric forms.
Best suited for short to medium display text where its angled brush rhythm can read clearly—posters, event titles, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It also fits casual branding moments (especially energetic or sporty themes) and can work for quotes or pull-lines when given generous size and line spacing.
The overall tone is upbeat and informal, with a confident, quick-written cadence. It suggests motion and spontaneity—more like a signature or poster lettering than a careful book hand—while staying clean enough to feel friendly and approachable.
The design appears intended to deliver a fast, expressive handwritten look with brush-like stroke logic while remaining readable and consistent across the alphabet and numerals. It prioritizes personality and momentum over formal refinement, aiming for punchy display impact in everyday, informal contexts.
Ascenders and capitals lean into expressive entry/exit strokes, and several shapes show subtle overshoots and asymmetric joins typical of marker lettering. The texture remains smooth and solid rather than dry or distressed, keeping it legible at display sizes while still retaining a hand-made character.