Print Oggam 8 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, invitations, quotes, packaging, menus, friendly, casual, approachable, playful, personal, informal text, handwritten feel, friendly branding, easy readability, everyday use, rounded, smooth, tapered, lively.
The design is an italic, hand-rendered print style with smooth, rounded strokes and gently tapered terminals that mimic pen pressure. Letterforms lean consistently to the right, with soft curves, slightly condensed counters, and a lively baseline rhythm. Capitals are simple and open, while the lowercase shows more calligraphic influence—especially in the looping descenders and the single-storey forms—creating a coherent, fluid texture in text.
It works well for greeting cards, invitations, quotes, classroom materials, journals, and craft-oriented packaging where a personable tone is desired. The italic flow also suits lifestyle branding, cafe menus, social posts, and editorial pull quotes that benefit from an informal, handwritten accent. It is best used at sizes where the soft terminals and narrow counters stay clear, especially in dense paragraphs.
This face reads as friendly and informal, with a personable, handwritten warmth. The steady rightward slant and rounded joins give it an easy, conversational tone that feels approachable rather than formal or technical. Overall, it suggests everyday note-taking energy with a lightly playful, optimistic cadence.
The font appears designed to capture the look of neat, quick handwriting while remaining legible in longer passages. Its consistent slant, controlled stroke modulation, and simplified shapes aim for a natural pen-drawn character without the complexity of connected script. The overall intention feels like adding human warmth and informality to headings and short-to-medium text.
In sample text, spacing and rhythm remain even enough for continuous reading, while the more expressive lowercase (notably with looping descenders) provides distinctive texture. Numerals follow the same slanted, hand-drawn logic, helping mixed text-and-number settings feel cohesive.