Distressed Osmo 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, branding, headlines, album art, handmade, casual, rustic, playful, organic, hand-lettered feel, analog texture, informal display, craft aesthetic, brushy, textured, rough, dry-brush, wiry.
A condensed, hand-drawn display face with a dry-brush texture and visibly irregular stroke edges. Letterforms are built from quick, calligraphic strokes with tapering terminals and occasional ink breaks, creating a lively, imperfect rhythm. Curves and bowls are slightly uneven and the baseline feel is subtly wobbly, while counters remain fairly open for a textured style. Capitals are tall and narrow, and the numerals echo the same brushy, sketch-like construction.
Well suited to display use where texture is a feature: posters, event graphics, packaging labels, café or craft branding, and editorial headings that want an organic, tactile edge. It can also work for short pull quotes or social graphics, especially when paired with a clean sans for body copy.
The overall tone is informal and human, with a crafty, made-by-hand character that feels spirited rather than polished. Its roughened marks suggest analog tools—marker or brush on paper—bringing a warm, DIY energy to headlines and short phrases.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of hand lettering while retaining a coherent, repeatable alphabet. The condensed build and rough brush texture aim to deliver strong visual flavor in titles and logos without requiring custom lettering.
The texture is consistent across the alphabet and figures, and the condensed proportions help the face pack a lot of personality into tight spaces. The brush modulation is most noticeable in joins and curves, where strokes thicken and thin abruptly, reinforcing the distressed, printed-by-hand impression.