Print Osruh 8 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, casual, energetic, friendly, handmade, expressive, handwritten look, personal tone, fast brush, casual display, expressive caps, brushy, slanted, looping, springy, monoline-leaning.
A lively handwritten print with a pronounced rightward slant and brush-pen rhythm. Strokes feel medium in contrast, with tapered entries and exits that suggest pressure changes rather than rigid calligraphic construction. Letterforms are compact and narrow overall, with quick, looping curves and occasional extended terminals (notably in capitals) that add motion. The lowercase stays short and tidy relative to the capitals, while widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an improvised, written feel rather than strict geometric regularity.
Well-suited to short display lines where a personal, handwritten voice is desired—posters, product packaging, café or lifestyle branding, and social media graphics. It can also work for pull quotes or section headers when paired with a calmer text face, especially where an energetic, informal tone is appropriate.
The tone is informal and upbeat, like fast, confident marker lettering on a note or menu board. Its bouncy slant and rounded loops convey approachability and spontaneity, with just enough flourish in the capitals to feel expressive without becoming ornate.
The design appears intended to capture quick brush handwriting in a clean, reproducible font: expressive enough to feel personal, yet controlled enough to set longer phrases without losing clarity. Its compact proportions and consistent slant suggest a focus on punchy display use with a friendly, human touch.
Capitals read as simplified, italic-leaning script capitals, while the lowercase remains largely unconnected, keeping the texture open and legible at display sizes. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic with compact forms and slight baseline liveliness, matching the overall momentum of the alphabet.