Print Gudad 14 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: notes, quotes, packaging, posters, greeting cards, casual, friendly, playful, personal, approachable, human touch, informality, approachability, everyday writing, warmth, hand-drawn, monoline, rounded, loose, bouncy.
A casual hand-printed design with a right-leaning posture and a monoline feel. Strokes are smooth but intentionally irregular, with soft curves, occasional wobbles, and subtly uneven terminals that mimic pen-on-paper movement. Proportions are slightly narrow and varied from glyph to glyph, giving an organic rhythm; counters stay open and simplified, and many forms favor rounded joins over crisp corners. The overall texture is airy and uncluttered, with a lively baseline and gently inconsistent widths that read as authentically handwritten rather than mechanically uniform.
Works well for short-to-medium text where a human touch is desired, such as quotes, invitations, greeting cards, casual branding, packaging, social posts, and classroom or craft materials. It’s especially effective for headings, labels, and display copy where the handwritten texture can be appreciated without crowding.
The font conveys an informal, friendly tone—more like a quick note or journal heading than formal typography. Its light, bouncy rhythm and hand-drawn inconsistencies create a personable, relaxed voice that feels approachable and playful without becoming overly decorative.
Designed to replicate an everyday, unconnected hand print with a natural slant and subtle imperfections. The emphasis appears to be on warmth and readability—keeping letterforms familiar and open while preserving the spontaneous, drawn-by-hand feel.
Uppercase letters remain simple and legible, while the lowercase introduces more character through varied loops and stroke endings. Numerals match the same hand-drawn logic, staying clear and uncomplicated, which helps maintain readability in mixed text. In running text, the rightward slant and uneven stroke endings add texture, so spacing and line length benefit from a little breathing room.