Print Efvo 10 is a light, narrow, low contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, album art, zines, quirky, hand-drawn, playful, rustic, offbeat, handmade feel, diy texture, expressive display, casual tone, angular, monoline, wiry, irregular, spiky.
A wiry, hand-drawn print style with angular construction and a slightly right-leaning, backhanded slant. Strokes are monoline and jittery, with uneven terminals that feel pen- or marker-sketched rather than mechanically drawn. Counters tend toward squarish forms, and many letters use simplified, boxy structures with occasional sharp diagonals. Spacing and widths vary noticeably across glyphs, creating a lively, uneven rhythm that reads as intentionally informal.
Best suited for short display copy where personality matters: headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and quirky labels. It can also work for informal editorial accents (pull quotes, section headers) or indie creative projects like zines and album art, especially when a deliberately handmade texture is desired.
The overall tone is quirky and offbeat, with a scratchy handmade energy that feels casual and slightly mischievous. Its imperfect geometry and nervous stroke texture give it an indie, DIY personality—more zine and notebook than polished branding.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, hand-rendered lettering with a geometric, slightly cramped skeleton—prioritizing character and spontaneity over typographic regularity. Its irregular rhythm and sketchy terminals suggest a goal of making text feel personal, animated, and casually crafted.
The uppercase set reads more rigid and rectangular, while the lowercase introduces more gesture and bounce, increasing the handwritten feel in running text. Numerals and punctuation carry the same angular, sketched character, helping the font stay consistent across mixed-content settings.