Print Osret 7 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, branding, packaging, headlines, social media, casual, expressive, playful, retro, friendly, handwritten feel, fast energy, friendly voice, compact display, brushy, slanted, tapered, looping, lively.
A lively, brush-pen style print with a consistent rightward slant and visibly tapered stroke endings. Letterforms are tall and compact, with narrow set widths and generous ascenders/descenders that create a vertical, airy rhythm. Strokes show mild thick–thin modulation typical of quick marker or brush writing, with rounded joins and occasional hooked terminals. Caps feel slightly more formal and calligraphic, while lowercase stays simple and readable, keeping letters unconnected but clearly handwritten in character.
Well suited for short headlines, posters, and punchy callouts where an informal, handwritten voice is desired. It can add personality to packaging, café/food branding, invitations, and social media graphics, especially at medium to large sizes where the tapered strokes and loops read cleanly. For long text blocks, its narrow, energetic rhythm may be better reserved for accents rather than continuous reading.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like a quick handwritten note made with a felt-tip or brush pen. Its brisk slant and narrow proportions give it energy and momentum, while the rounded forms keep it approachable. The effect leans slightly retro and craft-oriented without becoming decorative to the point of losing clarity.
Designed to mimic quick brush handwriting while remaining a printable, unconnected script-like style. The goal appears to be an energetic, friendly texture with compact letter widths and consistent slant for cohesive display typography.
Spacing appears relatively tight and text color stays even despite naturalistic stroke variation. Numerals follow the same slanted, hand-drawn logic and remain legible at display sizes. The short lowercase body paired with long extenders gives lines a bouncy texture and makes vertical rhythm a defining trait.