Print Ornow 13 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: social posts, packaging, posters, headlines, greeting cards, casual, energetic, friendly, playful, personal, handwritten tone, casual clarity, everyday warmth, quick emphasis, monoline, rounded, brushlike, loose, bouncy.
A casual handwritten print with a right-leaning slant, monoline strokes, and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are compact and vertically oriented, with narrow proportions and a lively, slightly uneven baseline rhythm that keeps the texture human and informal. Strokes show gentle tapering at joins and ends, suggesting a quick marker or brush-pen motion rather than constructed geometry. Counters remain open and simplified, and spacing is moderately tight, producing an active, continuous flow in longer text despite the unconnected letters.
Well suited for short-to-medium text where an informal, personal voice is desired: social media graphics, lifestyle packaging, café menus, greeting cards, and casual display lines. It can also work for subheads and pull quotes when you want a handwritten accent without joining strokes.
The font reads as upbeat and conversational, like quick personal notes or informal captions. Its brisk slant and bouncy stroke rhythm add momentum, while the rounded ends keep it approachable rather than edgy. Overall it conveys spontaneity and friendliness with a light, everyday tone.
The design appears intended to capture quick, natural handwriting in a clean print style, balancing legibility with the spontaneity of a hand-drawn line. Its compact proportions and consistent stroke weight suggest a focus on maintaining readable texture while preserving an expressive, human cadence.
Uppercase forms are straightforward and legible, while lowercase letters introduce more distinctive handwritten quirks (notably in single-storey shapes and looped descenders), giving the font personality in mixed-case settings. Numerals follow the same casual, drawn-by-hand logic and match the text color well, making them feel integrated rather than engineered.