Print Ondon 10 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, energetic, casual, expressive, sporty, urban, handmade feel, visual impact, sense of motion, casual voice, brushy, slanted, angular, gestural, dynamic.
An energetic brush-script print with a consistent rightward slant and punchy, tapered strokes. Forms are built from quick, calligraphic gestures: thick main strokes with sharp, pointed terminals and occasional wedge-like entries that suggest a broad brush or marker. Uppercase letters are compact and slightly condensed with simplified, legible structures, while lowercase features a modest x-height and tall ascenders/descenders that add vertical rhythm. Counters are relatively tight, joins are mostly unconnected, and the overall spacing feels lively and slightly irregular in a natural hand-drawn way.
Best suited for display typography where a dynamic handwritten tone is desired—posters, event promos, product packaging, café or streetwear branding, and social graphics. It also works well for short pull quotes and titles where the brushy rhythm can be a focal point without becoming overly dense.
The font conveys speed and confidence, with a bold, informal voice that feels hand-made and performance-oriented. Its sharp terminals and brisk slant give it a contemporary, streetwise edge, while the brush texture keeps it friendly and approachable.
The design appears intended to mimic fast brush lettering with a controlled, repeatable rhythm—capturing the spontaneity of hand lettering while staying readable across both uppercase and lowercase. Its condensed, slanted proportions and sharp terminals aim to deliver impact and motion in headline settings.
Distinctive details include pointed, blade-like terminals on many letters, teardrop/heart-like dots on i and j, and numerals that echo the same brush modulation for a cohesive set. The sample text shows good word-shape clarity at display sizes, though the tight counters and vigorous strokes can build dense texture in longer passages.