Print Doluf 1 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, sketchy, whimsical, quirky, airy, handmade, handwritten feel, casual tone, playful display, sketch aesthetic, monoline, spindly, scratchy, irregular, open counters.
A delicate, hand-drawn print face with monoline, spidery strokes and slight wobble in curves and stems. Letterforms are loosely constructed with open, rounded bowls and occasional angular joins, showing natural variation in stroke length, terminals, and proportions from glyph to glyph. Spacing feels loose and uneven in a deliberate, organic way, with simple, unembellished numerals and a lightly jittery baseline rhythm in text.
Best suited to short display settings where its handmade character can be appreciated—headlines, poster copy, cover titling, packaging accents, and greeting-card style messaging. It can work for brief captions or pull quotes at larger sizes, but the very thin strokes and irregular rhythm make it less suited to dense, small-size body text.
The overall tone is casual and playful, like quick pen notes or a sketchbook caption. Its thin, wiry marks give it an airy, lighthearted presence with a quirky, slightly eccentric personality rather than a polished or formal feel.
The design appears intended to capture an informal, human note-taking or doodled lettering look, prioritizing personality and spontaneity over typographic regularity. The thin line work and uneven details aim to feel light, approachable, and distinctly hand-rendered.
Uppercase forms are tall and prominent, while lowercase appears comparatively small, reinforcing a pronounced cap-to-x-height contrast in mixed text. Many terminals end in fine points or slight hooks, and several letters show subtle idiosyncrasies (as if redrawn each time), which adds charm but reduces uniformity.