Print Anner 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, social posts, quotes, menus, captions, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, informality, warmth, personality, readability, everyday tone, monoline, rounded terminals, hand-drawn, condensed texture, tall proportions.
A monoline, handwritten print style with gently rounded terminals and subtle wobble in the stroke path. Proportions are tall and compact, with narrow letterforms and small counters that create a tight, vertical texture in text. Curves are soft and slightly irregular, and straight stems show hand-drawn variance; the result is consistent enough for paragraphs while retaining a clearly hand-rendered character. Capitals are simple and upright, while lowercase forms add charm through occasional looped or hooked joins and descenders.
Well-suited for informal branding, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and lifestyle or craft-oriented materials where a friendly handwritten voice is helpful. It can work for short to medium text settings such as captions, quotes, menus, and product descriptions, especially when a compact, narrow texture is desirable. It also fits educational or kid-adjacent contexts, worksheets, and UI labels that benefit from an approachable, non-technical feel.
This font conveys a casual, friendly tone with a lightly playful, human presence. The uneven rhythm and soft curves keep it approachable and informal, making it feel conversational rather than polished or corporate. Overall it reads as warm and personable, like neat hand lettering done quickly but confidently.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy, informal handwriting with a consistent monoline stroke, balancing personality with functional readability. Its narrow, tall proportions suggest an aim to fit more text into limited space while still feeling human and relaxed. The small irregularities and rounded endings are used to keep the texture lively and unmistakably hand-drawn.
Letter spacing appears naturally tight due to the condensed forms, giving lines a compact, vertical rhythm. Numerals match the same monoline, hand-drawn logic and feel cohesive alongside the letters.