Print Oslur 4 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, branding, casual, playful, friendly, handmade, energetic, handmade feel, casual voice, compact display, expressive brush, brushy, monolinear, rounded, bouncy, textured.
A lively brush-pen handwritten with a slight forward slant and compact proportions. Strokes are mostly monolinear with subtly tapered starts and ends, and occasional ink-like swelling that adds texture without becoming fully calligraphic. The rhythm is bouncy and irregular in a controlled way, with narrow letter bodies, tall ascenders, and tight counters that keep words compact. Terminals are generally rounded and soft, and the overall silhouette favors quick, confident curves over rigid geometry.
Best suited for display uses where a human, handmade voice is desired—headlines, posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, and casual branding. It also works well for short quotes, labels, and section titles where compact width helps fit text into tight spaces without looking mechanical.
The tone feels informal and personable, like quick marker notes or a friendly headline written by hand. Its energetic, slightly imperfect texture reads approachable and upbeat, leaning toward modern craft and casual lifestyle aesthetics rather than formal correspondence.
Designed to emulate quick brush lettering with a confident, spontaneous feel while retaining enough consistency to set readable words and short lines. The compact, narrow build and lively stroke endings suggest an intention to deliver expressive impact in limited space.
Uppercase forms read like expressive, simplified caps with occasional script-like joins and looped gestures, while the lowercase maintains a consistent handwritten flow without connecting strokes. Numerals follow the same brisk brush logic, staying narrow and legible with a hand-drawn character. The density and narrow set can make it feel punchy in short bursts, while very small sizes may lose some interior clarity due to tight apertures.