Print Berem 16 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: social posts, packaging, invitations, posters, headlines, casual, friendly, playful, hand-drawn, chatty, human touch, informality, approachability, simplicity, everyday note, monoline, rounded, bouncy, airy, irregular.
A monoline handwritten print with softly rounded terminals and gently wavering strokes that preserve a natural pen rhythm. Letterforms are tall and slim with open counters and modest baseline wobble, creating an airy texture in text. Proportions vary slightly from glyph to glyph, and several forms show simplified, sketch-like construction (notably the narrow bowls and single-stroke joins), reinforcing the informal, drawn-by-hand character. Figures and capitals keep the same light, even stroke and understated curves, maintaining a consistent, uncluttered silhouette.
Works well for short-to-medium text where a human, informal voice is desired—such as social graphics, casual packaging, invitations, and poster-style headlines. It can also serve as an accent font for labels, pull quotes, and UI microcopy when a friendly handwritten feel is needed.
The overall tone is relaxed and personable, like quick neat handwriting in a notebook. Its narrow, buoyant forms feel approachable and a bit whimsical without becoming decorative or theatrical, lending a conversational, everyday warmth.
The design appears intended to capture a clean, quick handwritten print—more readable than cursive but still personal—while keeping strokes simple and consistent for easy setting in contemporary, casual design contexts.
Legibility is supported by open shapes and clear, separated letters, though the compressed width and short lowercase bodies can make word shapes feel tall and slightly spiky at smaller sizes. The numerals and capitals match the same casual drawing logic, keeping the set cohesive for mixed-case, mixed-content settings.