Print Osbaz 7 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, headlines, casual, lively, friendly, expressive, playful, hand-lettered feel, display clarity, energetic tone, compact headlines, brushy, calligraphic, oblique, monoline feel, tapered strokes.
A slanted, handwritten print face with brush-pen character and clear, unconnected letterforms. Strokes show pronounced modulation with pointed terminals and occasional wedge-like thickening, producing a crisp high/low rhythm while maintaining an overall clean silhouette. Proportions run on the condensed side with tall ascenders and compact counters, and curves are slightly asymmetric in a natural, hand-drawn way. Uppercase forms mix simple, upright structures with calligraphic flourishes (notably in diagonals and joins), while lowercase stays readable with a straightforward, single-storey ‘a’ and ‘g’ and open shapes that keep text from clogging.
Works well for branding accents, packaging copy, posters, and social graphics where a friendly, hand-lettered feel is desired. It also suits headlines, pull quotes, and short passages in editorial or lifestyle contexts, especially when you want an informal tone without fully connected script complexity.
The tone feels informal and human, like quick marker lettering refined for consistent use. Its energetic slant and snappy terminals add momentum, giving it a cheerful, personable voice that reads as contemporary and approachable rather than formal or traditional.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of handwritten brush lettering while retaining the structure and separation of a print style for clarity. Its condensed proportions and italic lean suggest a focus on energetic headlines and compact display typography that still feels personal and crafted.
The numerals echo the same brisk, handwritten logic, with narrow widths and lively curves that suit display settings. Spacing appears even enough for short text, but the sharp modulation and angled stress make it most visually distinctive at larger sizes where the stroke contrast and terminal shapes can be appreciated.