Print Vanid 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, greeting cards, classroom materials, playful, casual, friendly, whimsical, handmade, handwritten warmth, casual readability, playful display, human texture, monoline, rounded, bouncy, loopy, tall.
A tall, monoline handwritten print with rounded terminals and a lightly right-leaning posture. Strokes keep an even, low-contrast weight and retain an inked, slightly wobbly baseline that gives the line a natural rhythm. Letterforms are narrow and upright in construction, with occasional loops and soft joins inside forms (notably in capitals like Q and in letters with bowls), and overall spacing that feels airy and uneven in a deliberate, hand-drawn way. Numerals and lowercase share the same simple, marker-like construction, with single-storey forms and open counters that keep the texture light.
Well-suited to informal display and short text where a personal, handwritten voice is desirable—posters, quotes, invitations, greeting cards, craft packaging, and social graphics. It can also work for headings and labels in educational or family-oriented designs, where warmth and legibility are both important.
The tone is upbeat and approachable, with a doodled, personal feel that reads as friendly rather than formal. Its bouncy proportions and occasional loops add a touch of whimsy, making it feel conversational and kid-adjacent without becoming overly cartoonish.
The design appears intended to mimic neat hand printing with a marker-pen feel—prioritizing charm, immediacy, and a human rhythm over geometric precision. Its narrow build and tall forms help it stay readable in compact headings while still delivering a distinctly handwritten personality.
Capitals are relatively tall and prominent, creating a lively mixed-case color; several glyphs show distinctive, slightly idiosyncratic shapes that reinforce the handmade character. The consistent monoline stroke and rounded endings help maintain cohesion across letters, digits, and punctuation in running text.