Print Wokit 10 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social graphics, book covers, casual, hand-drawn, quirky, friendly, playful, handmade feel, approachability, informal voice, display readability, sketchy, marker-like, wiry, uneven, textured.
A hand-drawn print face with wiry, marker-like strokes and visible wobble in curves and stems. Letterforms are mostly upright with slightly irregular baselines and varying sidebearings, giving the text a lively, uneven rhythm. Terminals are blunt and occasionally tapered, and counters tend to be open and simplified, prioritizing quick, readable shapes over precise geometry. Capitals are tall and narrow with a slightly condensed feel, while lowercase forms are straightforward and unconnected, with modest ascenders and descenders and a single-storey “a.” Numerals follow the same sketchy construction, with inconsistent stroke overlaps that add texture without overwhelming legibility.
Best suited to short-to-medium text settings where a casual, handmade tone is desirable—such as posters, packaging callouts, social media graphics, invitations, and playful editorial headlines. It can also work for captions or pull quotes at comfortable sizes where the textured strokes remain clear.
The overall tone feels informal and human, like quick signage or notes written with a felt-tip pen. Its slight roughness and inconsistent stroke behavior create a personable, approachable voice with a touch of quirky energy rather than polish or restraint.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, natural handwriting in a printed (unconnected) style, capturing the spontaneity of a hand-rendered marker line while maintaining dependable readability for display use.
Repeated strokes and small overlaps are visible in several glyphs, suggesting a drawn/outlined build that creates a subtle darkening in joins and curves. Round letters (like O/C) stay fairly open and readable, while diagonals (V/W/X) appear more emphatic due to stroke stacking and angular turns.