Print Omdav 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, branding, social media, headlines, casual, friendly, lively, retro, warm, hand-lettered feel, informal tone, everyday legibility, energetic motion, brushed, slanted, rounded, springy, legible.
A slanted, brush-like handwritten print with smooth, rounded turns and gently tapered stroke endings. Letterforms show a consistent rightward flow and a slightly bouncy baseline feel, with compact lowercase proportions and a relatively modest x-height against taller ascenders. Strokes carry moderate thick–thin modulation, suggesting a pen or brush marker, and curves are broad and open for readability. Numerals and capitals maintain the same informal rhythm, with some natural variation in widths that keeps texture lively rather than rigid.
Works well for short-to-medium display settings such as posters, café or boutique branding, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and informal headlines. It can also suit quotes or invitations where a handwritten feel is desired, especially at sizes where the brush modulation and rounded details remain visible.
The font reads as approachable and upbeat, with an easy, conversational tone. Its italic slant and brushy terminals add motion and a touch of vintage sign-painting flavor without becoming overly decorative. Overall it feels personal and friendly—expressive enough to be distinctive, but controlled enough to stay clear.
Likely designed to capture the look of quick, confident hand lettering with a brush pen—prioritizing friendly personality, forward motion, and everyday legibility over strict geometric regularity. The controlled slant and consistent modulation suggest an intention to feel handmade while remaining dependable in common display uses.
Capitals are simple and uncluttered, pairing well with the lowercase while still providing emphasis. The sample text shows good wordshape continuity and smooth joins-by-proximity (unconnected letters that still visually “flow”), which helps maintain rhythm in longer lines.