Print Gonud 12 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, book covers, quirky, handmade, retro, playful, whimsical, hand-lettered charm, display impact, casual tone, space-saving, condensed, angular, monoline, wiry, irregular.
A condensed, hand-drawn print with tall proportions and a wiry, monoline feel. Strokes stay mostly even in thickness, with subtly wobbly edges and occasional tapered terminals that suggest a marker or brush pen. Counters are compact and often slightly off-round, and curves resolve into mildly angular joins, giving the letterforms a crisp but imperfect silhouette. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, creating a lively, uneven rhythm while remaining legible in short text.
Best suited to display typography where its irregular rhythm and condensed silhouette can add character—headlines, posters, packaging, labels, and book covers. It can work for short blurbs or pull quotes when you want an informal, hand-lettered texture, but it may feel busy in long passages or at very small sizes.
The overall tone is quirky and personable, with a vintage craft sensibility. Its narrow, upright stance feels energetic and slightly eccentric, like hand-lettered signage or a playful editorial headline.
The design appears intended to capture the charm of informal hand lettering in a clean, print-like structure: narrow, upright forms for space-efficient headlines, paired with deliberate imperfections to keep the texture human and expressive.
Uppercase forms read bold and poster-like despite the light, even stroke, while the lowercase keeps a casual, handwritten cadence. Numerals follow the same condensed, slightly irregular construction, supporting display settings that need a cohesive, handmade voice.