Print Osgis 3 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, branding, headlines, social media, playful, expressive, handmade, casual, lively, handmade voice, expressive display, casual emphasis, brush lettering, brushy, textured, bouncy, quirky, tapered.
This font has a brisk, handwritten brush-pen look with compact proportions and a strong rightward slant. Strokes show pronounced thick-to-thin modulation with pointed, tapered terminals and occasional hooked entry/exit strokes that suggest quick, confident lettering. Letterforms are generally upright in construction but lean consistently, with slightly irregular widths and spacing that create a lively rhythm. Counters are small and often pinched, and curves are drawn with a slightly dry-brush texture that keeps edges organic rather than perfectly smooth.
This style works best for short, attention-grabbing text such as posters, cover titles, packaging callouts, café/restaurant signage, and social media graphics where a handmade voice is desirable. It can also suit branding accents and taglines when paired with a calmer companion typeface for longer reading.
The overall tone is informal and energetic, with a friendly, spirited personality that feels personal and human. Its bouncy cadence and inky contrast give it a poster-like immediacy—more expressive than refined—leaning toward fun, crafty, and upbeat communication.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of fast brush lettering—compact, energetic, and characterful—while staying legible enough for punchy display lines. It prioritizes expressive stroke movement and a casual rhythm over geometric consistency, aiming for a warm, handcrafted impression.
Capitals are narrow and gestural, mixing simplified strokes with occasional flourished shapes, while lowercase forms maintain a consistent brush logic without connecting. Numerals follow the same handwritten rhythm, with narrow silhouettes and tapered ends that keep them visually aligned with the letters. The texture and contrast add character at display sizes but can create dense dark spots in tightly set text.