Print Onmog 3 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, album art, event promos, energetic, edgy, casual, expressive, handmade, handmade texture, display impact, brush authenticity, informal voice, brushy, rough, textured, angular, dry-brush.
An expressive brush-drawn print style with visibly dry, textured strokes and a forward slant. Letterforms are narrow and condensed overall, with medium contrast created by pressure-like stroke modulation and occasional tapered terminals. Edges are intentionally rough and slightly jagged, with small breaks and uneven ink deposition that reinforce a hand-painted feel. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, producing a lively rhythm while maintaining consistent baseline alignment and clear silhouettes.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, headlines, packaging accents, and promotional graphics where texture and motion are desirable. It can also work for album art, skate/street-inspired branding, or energetic social media titles, especially at larger sizes where the brush detail reads clearly.
The font projects a fast, gestural attitude—confident, slightly gritty, and informal. Its dry-brush texture and brisk slant add urgency and personality, giving text a handmade, street-poster energy rather than a polished editorial tone.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, pressure-driven brush lettering with a dry, imperfect edge—capturing the spontaneity of hand-painted marks while remaining readable for display text. Its condensed proportions and lively stroke texture suggest a goal of delivering impact and personality in a compact footprint.
Uppercase shapes stay relatively legible with simplified, brushy construction, while lowercase forms lean more calligraphic with taller ascenders and compact counters. Numerals follow the same painted logic, with rounded bowls and tapered entries that keep the set cohesive. The texture is a prominent feature, so the look will depend on size and output method (screen vs. print).