Print Otla 13 is a very bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, album art, brushy, energetic, casual, expressive, gritty, handmade feel, bold impact, brush texture, informal voice, display emphasis, dry-brush, textured, slanted, painterly, dynamic.
This font has a dry-brush marker look with heavy, pressure-driven strokes and visibly textured edges. Letterforms are forward-slanted and built from quick, confident movements, producing tapered terminals, occasional bristle streaks, and uneven stroke boundaries. Shapes are compact and somewhat condensed, with lively, irregular contours that keep a consistent hand-drawn rhythm across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Best suited for short display settings where texture and motion are an advantage, such as posters, punchy headlines, branding marks, packaging accents, and entertainment or music artwork. It can also work for pull quotes or social graphics, but the strong texture and condensed forms make it less ideal for small-size, long-form reading.
The overall tone is bold and spontaneous, like handwritten signage made with a loaded brush or marker. Its rough texture and fast stroke rhythm convey urgency, attitude, and a casual, street-level informality rather than polish or restraint.
The design appears intended to emulate bold brush lettering with a dry, bristled finish—capturing speed, pressure variation, and imperfect edges to deliver a strong handmade presence in display typography.
Caps read like gestural display letters with simplified internal structure (notably in E/F/T), while curves (C/G/O/Q) show broad, sweeping bowls and natural tapering. Lowercase maintains the same brush logic, with a relatively small i-dot and a tall, looped descender on g. Numerals are similarly handwritten and slightly inconsistent in width, reinforcing the handmade character.