Print Osdet 15 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, social graphics, packaging, covers, quotes, casual, friendly, energetic, handmade, lively, handwritten voice, casual display, human warmth, quick emphasis, brushy, slanted, expressive, monoline-ish, loose.
A brisk, handwritten print with a pronounced forward slant and an irregular, pen-and-brush rhythm. Strokes read as mostly uniform but with subtle pressure changes at turns and terminals, giving a lightly calligraphic feel without fully joining letters. The forms are tall and compact, with quick, tapered endings, occasional hooked entries, and a slightly bouncy baseline that reinforces the hand-drawn character. Uppercase shapes are simplified and gestural, while lowercase retains a clear handwritten structure with open counters and narrow interior spaces.
Well-suited to display use where a quick handwritten voice is desirable—posters, social media graphics, packaging callouts, cover art, and quote treatments. It can also work for short subheads or labels when an approachable, human touch is needed, especially at moderate-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like fast note-taking or a confident marker script used for headlines. It feels energetic and contemporary rather than polished or ceremonial, projecting warmth and spontaneity.
Designed to emulate fast, confident handwriting in an unconnected print style, balancing legibility with expressive movement. The intent appears to be a versatile casual headline face that injects personality and motion without the complexity of fully connected script.
Letterforms show deliberate inconsistency in widths and stroke endings, which adds authenticity but can create a more animated texture in longer lines. The numerals follow the same brisk, slanted construction, keeping the set visually cohesive for casual titling and short bursts of text.