Print Videz 1 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, game ui, hand-drawn, quirky, medieval, storybook, rustic, handmade texture, fantasy tone, rustic display, expressive titling, irregular, spiky, angular, wiry, textured.
A wiry, hand-drawn print face with narrow proportions and a lively, irregular rhythm. Strokes are thin with subtle contrast and frequent tapering, producing sharp terminals and slightly spiky joins. Forms mix angular construction with occasional bowed curves, and character widths vary noticeably, enhancing the handmade cadence. Uppercase letters tend toward tall, pointed silhouettes, while the lowercase is compact with a short x-height and simple, unconnected shapes; spacing feels organic rather than mechanically even.
Best suited to short display settings such as headlines, posters, book covers, and themed packaging where a hand-inked voice is desirable. It also fits fantasy or historical-themed interfaces and titling, where characterful texture matters more than maximum small-size clarity.
The overall tone feels quirky and slightly medieval, like inked lettering from a fantasy margin note or a handmade shop sign. Its jittery outlines and pointed details add tension and personality, reading as playful, rustic, and a touch mischievous rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to mimic quick pen-and-ink lettering with a deliberate roughness: narrow, upright forms, pointed terminals, and slight inconsistencies that preserve a drawn-by-hand authenticity. The goal seems to be an expressive, narrative-friendly texture that evokes handmade signage or storybook titling.
The numerals share the same sketchy, calligraphic energy, with angular bends and occasional asymmetry that keeps the texture consistent across mixed text. In longer samples the uneven stroke edges and variable character widths create a distinctive color that favors expressive display over strict uniformity.