Print Yonaw 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, social graphics, hand-drawn, quirky, casual, lively, rustic, handmade feel, casual display, compact headlines, human texture, spiky terminals, irregular rhythm, dry brush, loose baseline, condensed.
This is a hand-drawn print style with tall, slender letterforms and a noticeably irregular rhythm. Strokes show medium contrast with a dry, slightly scratchy edge and occasional swelling, suggesting a marker or brush-pen feel without true cursive connections. Terminals tend to be sharp or tapered, and many letters have subtly uneven curves and off-center joins that reinforce an organic, made-by-hand construction. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, giving text a jittery, handmade texture while remaining legible in short lines.
It works best for short, high-impact text such as posters, display headlines, labels, and packaging where a handmade voice is desirable. The narrow proportions also suit tight spaces like social graphics or sidebars, while the textured stroke character is more effective at moderate-to-large sizes than in long body copy.
The font reads as informal and expressive, with a quirky, slightly edgy energy. Its narrow, spiky shapes and uneven ink texture evoke quick note-taking, indie craft packaging, or hand-lettered signage rather than polished editorial typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a quick, authentic hand-lettered look—compact and energetic—while keeping the letterforms straightforward enough for readable display typography.
Uppercase forms are especially tall and linear, while lowercase maintains a simple printed structure with minimal ornament. Numerals match the same narrow, hand-rendered logic, with thin, tapered strokes and modest irregularities that help them blend into text settings.