Print Dyraw 5 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, quotes, airy, scribbled, quirky, nervy, casual, handwritten feel, lightness, expressiveness, informality, motion, monoline, angular, sketchy, spidery, slanted.
A spidery monoline face with a steady rightward slant and a lightly sketch-drawn construction. Strokes are hairline-thin and largely uniform, with frequent sharp angles, pointed joins, and occasional open or clipped terminals that give letters a faceted, hand-rendered look. Curves are rendered as taut arcs rather than smooth rounds, and counters tend to be small and irregular. Spacing is uneven in a natural way, and the overall rhythm feels wiry and kinetic rather than polished or geometric.
Works best in display settings where the thin, scribbled texture can be appreciated—short headlines, posters, cover treatments, packaging accents, and social graphics. It can also suit quote cards or editorial pull quotes when set large with generous tracking and line spacing. Avoid dense body copy or small UI labels, where the hairline strokes and irregular shapes may reduce clarity.
The tone is informal and idiosyncratic, like quick note-taking or a light pen sketch. Its thin, angular gestures add a slightly tense, edgy energy while still reading as playful and personal. The overall feel is airy and ephemeral, suited to expressive, understated messaging rather than authoritative text.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of handwritten print—fast, lightly constructed letterforms with a consistent slant and a deliberately imperfect outline. The intent appears to prioritize personality and motion over typographic neutrality, creating a distinctive drawn texture in larger sizes.
Uppercase forms are tall and lean with simplified geometry, while lowercase shows more variation and gesture, reinforcing the hand-drawn character. Numerals follow the same delicate, slanted construction and can appear especially fragile at small sizes due to the extremely fine stroke.