Print Gorob 10 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, craft branding, packaging, posters, social graphics, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, youthful, handmade feel, casual legibility, playful display, organic texture, hand-drawn, monoline, rounded, wobbly, inked.
A hand-drawn, monoline print style with slightly wobbly strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are narrow and compact with a lively, uneven rhythm, showing small variations in stroke width and curve tension that mimic pen-and-ink writing. Counters tend to be small, ascenders are relatively tall, and the lowercase sits low with a modest x-height, giving the font a lean, vertical presence. Overall spacing feels a bit irregular in an intentional, organic way, helping the texture read as genuinely handwritten rather than mechanically geometric.
This font is well suited to playful headlines, children’s or classroom materials, craft-themed branding, and packaging that benefits from an informal handmade tone. It also works nicely in short phrases for posters, invitations, labels, and social media graphics where personality matters more than typographic precision.
The tone is informal and approachable, with a playful, slightly eccentric personality. Its irregularities and narrow build create a whimsical, homemade feel that reads friendly and chatty rather than formal or corporate.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of quick hand lettering while staying legible in mixed-case text. Its narrow proportions and consistent monoline strokes suggest a focus on creating a distinctive handwritten texture that fits comfortably in tighter layouts without losing charm.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent hand-drawn logic, while still differing enough to support natural mixed-case setting. Numerals match the same narrow, pen-drawn character, making the set feel cohesive for casual display and short text. The overall texture can look busy at small sizes due to tight counters and the lively stroke wobble.