Print Birel 15 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, children’s media, social graphics, craft branding, friendly, playful, casual, whimsical, handmade, handmade warmth, casual readability, cheerful branding, expressive caps, rounded, looped, flowing, bouncy, informal.
A lively handwritten print with smooth, rounded strokes and a consistent rightward slant. Letterforms are built from soft curves and looped terminals, with brush-pen–like modulation that gently thickens on curves and downstrokes without becoming calligraphic. Proportions feel compact and slightly tall, with small counters and a modest x-height, while spacing remains open enough to keep words readable. The overall rhythm is bouncy and organic, with subtle irregularities that reinforce a hand-drawn texture while staying stylistically cohesive across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
This font suits short to medium-length copy where an informal, personable voice is desired—greeting cards, invitations, craft and boutique branding, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It can work well for headlines, pull quotes, labels, and product names, especially when a friendly handmade feel is more important than strict typographic neutrality.
The tone is warm, approachable, and lightly whimsical—more like neat marker or brush lettering than formal script. It suggests personality and ease, making text feel conversational and upbeat rather than authoritative or technical.
The design appears intended to deliver a clean, legible handwritten look with just enough flourish to feel distinctive. It balances decorative looped forms in caps with straightforward lowercase construction, aiming for everyday usability while preserving an expressive, hand-drawn character.
Uppercase characters lean toward decorative, loop-forward constructions that add flair in initials and short headings, while the lowercase maintains simpler print shapes for continuous reading. Numerals share the same rounded, slightly springy stroke behavior, helping mixed text (dates, prices, short codes) feel visually unified.