Print Oskaw 14 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, branding, energetic, casual, handmade, expressive, modern, handwritten feel, display impact, friendly tone, quick emphasis, modern casual, brushy, slanted, compact, bouncy, dynamic.
This font presents a fast, brush-pen look with a consistent rightward slant and compact letterforms. Strokes show natural pressure changes and tapered terminals, producing lively rhythm and a slightly rough, ink-on-paper texture. Proportions are tight and tall, with narrow counters and a generally streamlined silhouette; capitals are upright and simplified, while lowercase forms stay open and legible with minimal ornament. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, mixing rounded shapes with brisk diagonals and maintaining the same energetic stroke behavior.
It works best for short, high-impact text such as posters, promotional headlines, packaging callouts, and social graphics where an energetic handwritten voice is desired. It can also suit casual branding elements (logos, labels, signage) and pull quotes, especially when paired with a calmer companion text face. For longer paragraphs, it’s most effective as an accent style rather than primary body copy.
The overall tone is informal and spirited, with a confident, handwritten presence that feels personal rather than polished. Its brisk movement and brush texture convey immediacy—like a quick note, a marker headline, or an enthusiastic annotation. The style reads as contemporary and friendly, with enough edge to feel bold and attention-getting without becoming aggressive.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of brush handwriting in a compact, repeatable alphabet, balancing expressive stroke texture with straightforward, readable shapes. It prioritizes speed, personality, and punchy emphasis over formal precision, aiming to bring a human, contemporary note to display typography.
Spacing and stroke endings feel intentionally irregular in a human way, which adds charm and motion in longer lines. The slant and compressed proportions create a strong horizontal flow, helping words look cohesive even without connected script joins. Larger sizes emphasize the textured stroke edges and tapered entries; smaller sizes will read best with generous tracking and line spacing.