Print Ahrid 12 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, greeting cards, social graphics, children’s content, casual, friendly, playful, approachable, lively, human warmth, casual note, quick lettering, approachability, informal display, hand-drawn, monoline, bouncy, rounded, loose.
A loose, hand-drawn print face with a gently right-leaning stance and monoline strokes that stay even and soft. Letterforms are rounded and slightly uneven in a deliberate way, with open counters and simplified construction that keeps the texture airy. Proportions vary from glyph to glyph, creating a bouncy rhythm; ascenders and descenders are long and expressive, and terminals often end in tapered, brush-like strokes. Spacing feels natural and a bit irregular, reinforcing the handwritten cadence in both the alphabet grid and the paragraph sample.
This font works well for headlines, short paragraphs, and callouts where an informal, handmade voice is desired—such as posters, packaging labels, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It can also suit educational or kid-oriented materials when a friendly, non-rigid tone is needed, while staying readable in brief blocks of text.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick marker lettering on a note or poster. Its slight slant and springy shapes add energy without becoming frantic, giving it a warm, conversational feel. The texture reads as human and spontaneous, suited to friendly messaging rather than formal typography.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of casual pen or marker print lettering—clean enough to read quickly, but intentionally imperfect to preserve personality. Its consistent stroke weight and rounded, simplified forms suggest a focus on approachable usability with a distinctly hand-rendered texture.
Capitals are tall and relatively narrow, while lowercase remains simple and legible, with single-storey forms and generous curves. Numerals match the same hand-drawn logic, with rounded shapes and modest quirks that keep them consistent with the letters. In longer text, the lively baseline and stroke endings contribute to a distinct handwritten texture that is most comfortable at display and short-text sizes.