Print Osdeh 12 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, quotes, casual, energetic, friendly, expressive, handmade, human touch, informality, speed, approachability, display impact, brushed, monoline, spontaneous, upright-slant, loose.
An informal handwritten print with a lively rightward slant and a narrow, vertical footprint. Strokes feel like quick brush-pen or marker work: mostly monoline with subtle pressure-driven swelling at turns and terminals, and occasional tapered starts/ends. Forms are open and airy, with simplified construction and slight irregularities in curves and joins that reinforce a hand-drawn rhythm. Lowercase has notably small x-height relative to tall ascenders/descenders, and spacing appears uneven in a natural way, with widths varying noticeably from letter to letter.
This font works best for short to medium display copy where a friendly, handcrafted voice is desired—brand marks, packaging callouts, poster headlines, social media graphics, and quote-style layouts. It also suits invitations or menu-style headings where an informal handwritten feel helps soften the tone.
The overall tone is relaxed and personable, with a brisk, animated cadence that reads as human and spontaneous rather than polished or formal. It suggests everyday handwriting—confident, a little playful, and conversational—well suited to conveying warmth and immediacy.
The design appears intended to deliver a quick, readable handwritten print that preserves the speed and texture of real strokes, prioritizing personality and momentum over geometric consistency. Its narrow proportions and tall extenders help it make efficient, high-impact headlines while keeping a casual, human presence.
Capitals are tall and gestural, often built from a few decisive strokes, which creates strong word-shape contrast in mixed-case settings. Numerals match the handwritten character and keep the same narrow, upright-slanted flow, making them feel integrated in display text rather than strictly utilitarian.