Print Degud 11 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s, invitations, packaging, craft labels, social graphics, playful, friendly, casual, whimsical, approachable, handmade feel, casual readability, friendly tone, personal voice, rounded, bouncy, hand-drawn, monoline, irregular.
A casual, hand-drawn print face with rounded, monoline strokes and gently uneven curves that preserve the feel of marker or pen lettering. Letterforms are mostly upright with soft terminals, open counters, and slightly inconsistent widths and spacing that create a lively rhythm. Capitals are simple and legible with understated character quirks (such as varied bowl shapes and occasional asymmetric joins), while the lowercase keeps a compact x-height and a relaxed baseline that subtly wavers. Numerals follow the same informal construction, with smooth, looped shapes and uncomplicated geometry.
Works well for short to medium text where a friendly, handmade voice is desired—such as children’s materials, invitations and greeting cards, craft or boutique packaging, labels, and casual social or presentation graphics. It’s especially effective for headlines, quotes, and display copy where the relaxed rhythm can be part of the personality.
The overall tone is warm and personable, leaning playful and lightly whimsical without becoming overly decorative. Its mild irregularities and soft shapes convey informality, friendliness, and a handmade authenticity suited to conversational messaging.
Designed to emulate neat but informal hand printing: legible, approachable letterforms with just enough irregularity to feel personal rather than mechanical. The intention appears to be an everyday handwritten style that stays readable across a wide range of casual branding and editorial display contexts.
The forms prioritize clarity over strict uniformity, with noticeable per-glyph variation in stroke placement and curvature that reads as intentional hand lettering. Round characters (O, o, 0) are generously circular, and diagonals (V, W, X, Y) are slightly springy, reinforcing the bouncy, drawn-by-hand cadence in text.