Print Wubil 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, fashion branding, magazine titles, posters, packaging, fashion, editorial, dramatic, luxury, expressive, editorial impact, luxury tone, space-saving, stylish emphasis, hairline serifs, calligraphic, slanted, elegant, crisp.
A sharply slanted, high-contrast italic with extremely thin hairlines and dense, inky main strokes. The letterforms are narrow and tall, with a lively, calligraphic rhythm and tapered entry/exit strokes that sometimes resolve into needle-like terminals. Serifs are minimal and hairline, often reading as razor-thin brackets or flicks rather than sturdy slabs, and curves show a pronounced thick–thin modulation. Overall spacing appears tight and the texture is shimmering, with frequent diagonal stress and occasional long, slicing hairline strokes that add a sense of speed.
Best suited to display applications such as headlines, logotypes, fashion and beauty branding, magazine and editorial titling, posters, and premium packaging. It can also work for pull quotes or short subheads where its narrow italic silhouette helps fit text into tight spaces while maintaining a high-end tone.
The font projects a fashion-forward, editorial elegance—dramatic and refined, with a sense of movement and performance. Its razor contrast and narrow stance feel luxurious and slightly theatrical, like magazine titling or couture branding, while the calligraphic energy keeps it expressive rather than purely classical.
The design appears intended to deliver a sleek, couture-leaning italic voice that combines formal high-contrast structure with handwritten-like flair. Its narrow proportions and hairline detailing suggest a focus on striking silhouette and luxurious texture in large-scale typography.
In longer lines, the intense contrast and tight, narrow forms create a sparkling texture that favors display sizes over extended reading. Some capitals and diagonals feature exceptionally long hairlines that can become prominent graphic accents, especially where letters meet or overlap in dense settings.