Print Opse 7 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, casual, energetic, sporty, friendly, expressive, handmade feel, fast motion, display impact, casual warmth, brushy, slanted, rounded, compact, lively.
A slanted, brush-pen style print with compact proportions and a rhythmic, forward-leaning gesture. Strokes appear pressure-shaped with softly tapered terminals and rounded joins, keeping counters fairly open despite the dense, compact forms. The letterforms are unconnected but written with a consistent diagonal movement, and widths vary per character, giving the text a natural handwritten cadence. Overall color is strong and even, with occasional sharper hooks and flicks that suggest quick, confident strokes.
Well-suited to short, prominent text where a handwritten brush feel adds personality—posters, headlines, product packaging, and social media graphics. It also works for logos or badges that want a casual, energetic signature-like tone, and for informal signage where quick readability and expressiveness matter more than typographic neutrality.
The font conveys an upbeat, informal tone with a sense of speed and spontaneity. Its brisk slant and brushy edges feel personable and energetic, leaning toward modern casual branding rather than formal correspondence. The overall impression is friendly and expressive, with a slightly sporty, headline-ready attitude.
The design appears intended to simulate quick brush lettering in a clean, repeatable digital form: informal, slanted, and impactful, with enough consistency for repeated use while preserving a hand-drawn liveliness. Its compact build and strong stroke presence suggest an emphasis on attention-grabbing display settings rather than extended body text.
Caps are broad and gestural with simplified, stroke-driven construction, while the lowercase keeps a compact, note-like rhythm with clear, readable silhouettes. Numerals share the same brisk, handwritten flow and look well-matched for short callouts. At smaller sizes the tight interior spaces and lively stroke endings may benefit from a bit of extra tracking.