Print Omgiy 5 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, branding, casual, energetic, friendly, sporty, approachable, handwritten feel, headline impact, casual branding, quick brush, brushy, slanted, rounded, punchy, informal.
A lively brush-pen style with a consistent rightward slant, tapered stroke endings, and rounded, slightly flattened terminals. The letterforms show confident, single-stroke construction with subtle pressure modulation, creating soft thick–thin transitions without sharp contrast. Shapes are compact and a bit condensed, with open counters and simplified joins that keep the texture dark and cohesive in words. Capitals are upright in attitude but still cursive in motion, while lowercase forms maintain a quick, handwritten rhythm rather than strict geometric regularity.
This font works best for short-to-medium display settings where an expressive handwritten look is desired, such as posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, event promos, and logo-style wordmarks. It can also suit casual editorial accents (pull quotes, section headers) where a bold, brushy script-like print adds personality.
The overall tone feels informal and upbeat, like quick marker lettering used for notes, menus, or casual headlines. Its brisk slant and bold, brushy presence give it a sporty, personable voice that reads as friendly and direct rather than formal or delicate.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush handwriting with a legible print structure, balancing expressive stroke movement with enough consistency for branding and headline use. It prioritizes energy and immediacy over formal precision, aiming for a natural hand-drawn presence in contemporary designs.
In continuous text the dark stroke weight and lively angles create strong momentum and a textured line, with some letters leaning toward personal handwriting quirks (notably in the more looped or angled forms). Numerals match the same brush construction and slant, keeping a unified, hand-rendered feel across mixed text.