Print Osnib 3 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, branding, packaging, social media, friendly, casual, playful, handmade, approachable, handwritten realism, casual warmth, compact display, lively texture, brushy, rounded, bouncy, textured, quirky.
This font is a hand-drawn print style with brush-like strokes and visible pressure variation. Letterforms are narrow and tall with rounded terminals, slight wobble, and subtly irregular contours that keep a natural, inked feel. Strokes show high contrast in places, with thicker downstrokes and thinner connections, and spacing is lively rather than strictly uniform. Uppercase shapes stay simple and legible, while lowercase forms lean toward a quick handwritten construction with occasional cursive-like touches (notably in letters such as a, g, and y). Numerals match the same casual rhythm and stroke behavior.
Best suited for short to medium display copy where a human, handcrafted voice is desirable—headlines, posters, labels, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It can also work for invitations or signage where a friendly, casual impression matters more than typographic formality.
The overall tone feels informal and personable—like quick marker lettering for notes, packaging, or social posts. Its narrow, energetic rhythm gives it a slightly quirky, upbeat character while still reading clearly at display sizes.
The design appears intended to capture quick, confident handwritten lettering in a clean, readable print style, balancing personality with legibility. Its narrow build and brush-pen contrast support compact, attention-getting titles without feeling rigid or overly stylized.
The texture and uneven stroke edges suggest a real pen/brush origin rather than geometric construction, and the set maintains a consistent cap height and baseline despite the intentionally imperfect, hand-rendered detail. The narrow proportions help longer words fit compactly, while the variable letter widths keep the line from feeling mechanical.