Print Opwo 7 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, branding, energetic, casual, sporty, confident, playful, expressiveness, impact, handmade, display, brushy, slanted, compact, punchy, rounded.
A compact, brush-driven script with a consistent rightward slant and thick, saturated strokes. Letterforms show tapered entries and exits with rounded terminals, giving the texture of a loaded marker or brush pen rather than a pointed nib. Proportions are tall and narrow with tight counters, and widths shift from glyph to glyph in a natural handwritten rhythm. Uppercase characters lean toward simplified, swashy print-like shapes while lowercase stays brisk and note-like; overall spacing is snug and the silhouette reads as a dense, continuous flow even though letters are not connected.
Well-suited for bold display settings such as posters, product packaging, social graphics, and branding moments that want a handwritten punch. It works especially well for short phrases, event promotions, food and beverage labels, or energetic editorial callouts where texture and momentum matter more than quiet readability.
The tone is lively and informal, suggesting quick motion and hand-made immediacy. Its bold presence feels friendly and assertive—more like an energetic sign or headline than careful correspondence. The slanted, brushy texture adds a sporty, upbeat character that can read as contemporary and fun.
The design appears intended to capture a fast, confident brush-script look in a compact footprint, delivering strong black shapes with a natural handwritten bounce. It prioritizes expressive impact and rhythmic motion, providing a practical, attention-grabbing script for modern display typography.
The stroke ends often blunt or softly clipped, reinforcing a marker/brush impression. Numerals follow the same slanted, hand-drawn logic and hold their weight well, supporting prominent pricing or callouts. At smaller sizes the tight counters and compact width can increase visual density, so it tends to read best when given room or used in shorter bursts.