Print Ohgum 15 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, signage, headlines, merchandise, playful, energetic, casual, punchy, cheeky, expressiveness, informality, attention-grabbing, hand-painted feel, display impact, brushy, chunky, angular, organic, high-impact.
A chunky, brush-driven italic with compact, heavy strokes and a lively, irregular rhythm. Letterforms show tapered ends and occasional wedge-like terminals, giving the black shapes a cut-paper or dry-brush feel despite the dense weight. Curves are simplified and slightly lumpy, while many joins and counters stay open and asymmetrical, reinforcing a hand-drawn cadence. The texture reads as intentionally uneven rather than strictly geometric, with small variations in width and silhouette across the alphabet and figures.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, event flyers, product packaging, and storefront or menu signage where bold personality is an asset. It can also work for social graphics and merchandise marks when large sizes allow its brushy irregularities to read as intentional texture.
The overall tone is bold and expressive, with a friendly, mischievous energy that feels informal and spontaneous. Its exaggerated weight and brushy movement suggest a loud, attention-grabbing voice suited to fun, upbeat messaging rather than restrained or corporate communication.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted or marker-brush lettering in a consistent, font-ready form. Its goal is expressive emphasis—big silhouettes, quick strokes, and an informal slant—optimized for attention and personality over quiet readability.
Uppercase forms are especially blocky and gestural, while lowercase leans more script-like without connecting. Numerals are rounded and heavy, matching the letterforms’ thick, painted presence; the “0” is notably full and circular, and several figures have sharply cut terminals that keep the set dynamic. In longer text, the strong slant and dense blackness create a distinct, headline-forward color on the page.