Print Onmiw 7 is a regular weight, very wide, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, invitations, casual, playful, handmade, friendly, sketchy, handmade feel, expressiveness, friendly tone, display impact, brushy, rounded, bouncy, loose, textured.
A casual handwritten print face with brush-like strokes and visibly uneven pressure, producing thick-to-thin modulation and occasional tapered terminals. Letterforms are mostly unconnected and upright, with rounded turns, open bowls, and a lively, slightly bouncy baseline rhythm. Proportions are loose and variable, with generous widths in many caps and numerals, and a relatively small lowercase body that reinforces a compact x-height. Counters tend to be open and airy, while joins and stroke endings retain a drawn, slightly irregular edge that reads as intentionally handmade rather than geometric.
Well suited to display settings such as posters, cover art, packaging callouts, and social media graphics where a friendly handwritten tone is desired. It can also work for short-to-medium snippets like invitations, menu highlights, or labels, especially at sizes large enough to preserve the brushy detail and irregular rhythm.
The font conveys an informal, approachable tone—like quick marker or brush lettering used for notes, posters, and personal labeling. Its energetic rhythm and visible human variance add warmth and spontaneity, leaning playful rather than formal or corporate.
Designed to emulate quick, expressive hand lettering with natural variation, prioritizing personality and immediacy over strict uniformity. The goal appears to be a legible, informal print style that feels personal and energetic, with strong stroke contrast and broad, open shapes for visual impact.
Uppercase forms feel prominent and attention-getting in running text, while the lowercase stays modest, creating a distinctive cap-forward texture. The texture becomes more pronounced at larger sizes where stroke modulation and tapered ends read clearly, giving headlines and short phrases a lively, hand-rendered character.