Print Dagim 11 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, comics, social media, playful, handmade, quirky, casual, energetic, handmade voice, informal display, expressive texture, casual readability, brushy, spiky, ragged, compact, expressive.
A lively hand-drawn print with quick, brush-pen strokes and pronounced contrast between thick downstrokes and fine hairlines. Letterforms are compact and slightly irregular, with variable stroke endings that taper to points or flicks, giving many glyphs a scratchy, ink-on-paper feel. Curves are often lopsided and counters are small, while verticals tend to be tall and narrow; overall spacing is uneven in an intentionally human way that creates a rhythmic, animated texture in text.
Well suited for short, expressive copy such as posters, album or event graphics, casual packaging, stickers, and social content where a handmade voice is desirable. It can also work for comic-style captions or playful UI accents, but is best used at display sizes where the thin strokes and spiky terminals have room to breathe.
The font reads as informal and spirited, mixing a friendly handwritten tone with a slightly wild, edgy scribble quality. Its pointed terminals and bouncy proportions lend a sense of urgency and personality, making it feel conversational rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of marker or brush handwriting in a legible, unconnected print style. Its controlled upright stance and consistent overall construction suggest a deliberate attempt to balance readability with a raw, sketchy character.
Uppercase characters show particularly distinctive, angular gestures (notably in letters with diagonals), while lowercase forms keep a simple, note-like construction with occasional exaggerated ascenders and descenders. Numerals are similarly hand-rendered, with inconsistent widths and stroke finishing that match the alphabet. In longer lines, the irregular spacing and sharp terminals become a key part of the texture, so size and leading will influence legibility.