Print Wobov 14 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, event promo, social graphics, logos, energetic, casual, expressive, playful, handmade, handmade feel, high impact, casual display, expressive tone, brushy, textured, angular, slanted, sketchy.
A lively handwritten print with a consistent rightward slant and quick, brush-like stroke construction. Letterforms are compact and tall with a narrow overall footprint, showing medium contrast and visible stroke texture that suggests dry-brush or marker drag. Strokes taper at entries and exits, counters stay fairly open for the style, and forms mix rounded bowls with sharper terminals and occasional pointed joins. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, drawn-on look while keeping a readable baseline rhythm.
Best suited to display use where a handwritten, energetic tone is desirable—posters, packaging labels, social media graphics, and event promotion. It can also work for short brand marks or headlines that benefit from a lively, brushy personality, especially when set with generous tracking and plenty of contrast against the background.
The font feels spontaneous and energetic, like fast lettering made for emphasis rather than polish. Its textured strokes and slightly edgy shapes give it a modern, street-notebook tone—casual, expressive, and a bit mischievous. Overall it reads friendly and informal, with enough structure to stay legible while still feeling handmade.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick brush lettering in an unconnected print style, balancing expressive texture with enough consistency for readable display typography. Its narrow, slanted stance and variable letter widths point toward punchy headlines and emphatic phrases rather than long passages.
Uppercase shapes carry strong vertical momentum and often show pronounced tapered ends, while the lowercase maintains a compact, upright-to-slanted rhythm with clear, simple constructions. Numerals follow the same brisk, handwritten logic and share the textured stroke finish, helping headings and short callouts feel cohesive across letters and numbers.