Print Ebrit 10 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: book covers, posters, display, comics, halloween, quirky, whimsical, spooky, handmade, playful, expressiveness, handmade feel, quirky tone, horror hint, scratchy, spidery, wiry, sketchy, angular.
A wiry, hand-drawn print face with tall, slender letterforms and a lightly irregular stroke that mimics quick pen or brush marks. Strokes taper and flare subtly, with occasional pointed terminals, small hooks, and slight wobble that keeps the rhythm lively rather than geometric. Uppercase letters are narrow and elongated with simplified, angular construction, while the lowercase is smaller and notably short, creating a pronounced jump between cases. Overall spacing is airy, with uneven widths and a casual baseline that reads intentionally hand-rendered rather than formally engineered.
Best suited to display situations where personality matters more than typographic neutrality—posters, book or zine covers, game titles, Halloween or mystery-themed graphics, and comic-style captions. It can work for short phrases, pull quotes, and headings where the tall, narrow caps and scratchy texture are allowed to be the main visual voice.
The tone is quirky and slightly eerie—like handwritten titles for mysteries, folk tales, or oddball notes. Its spidery thin strokes and sharp accents add a nervous energy, while the informal construction keeps it approachable and playful.
Likely drawn to capture an expressive, slightly spooky handwritten look with tall, narrow proportions and lively imperfections. The design prioritizes character and gesture—tapered strokes, pointed terminals, and uneven widths—over strict consistency, aiming for a distinctive, illustrative presence in titles and short text.
The digit set follows the same wiry, drawn-by-hand logic with open counters and occasional asymmetry. In running text, the strong case contrast (tall caps paired with very small lowercase) becomes a defining feature, making mixed-case settings feel expressive and headline-oriented.