Print Venim 13 is a light, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, children’s titles, packaging, craft branding, posters, playful, whimsical, handmade, friendly, storybook, handwritten charm, casual display, personal voice, playful tone, monoline feel, tapered strokes, rounded terminals, bouncy baseline, quirky forms.
This font presents as an informal hand-drawn print with slender strokes and pronounced tapering at starts and finishes. Letterforms are generally upright with a slightly bouncy rhythm, mixing smooth curves with occasional angular joins for a lively, uneven texture. Terminals are rounded or brush-like, and several capitals have simplified, looped shapes that read as quick pen or brush gestures rather than constructed geometry. Spacing and proportions vary noticeably between glyphs, reinforcing a natural, written look; numerals follow the same narrow, lightly drawn pattern with modest curvature and open counters.
It works well for short-form display: greeting cards, invitations, children’s or hobby-related titles, craft branding, and playful packaging. The handwritten texture and variable proportions make it most effective at larger sizes where the tapered stroke detail and quirky shapes can be appreciated.
The overall tone is casual and approachable, with a whimsical, storybook-like personality. Its slight irregularities and tapered strokes evoke something handwritten on paper—friendly, personal, and a bit quirky rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to mimic neat, lightly brushed handwriting while staying readable in a print-like, unconnected style. It aims to provide an expressive, personable voice for friendly messaging and decorative headings without the formality of a traditional text face.
Capitals are tall and prominent, and the contrast between thicker downstrokes and finer connecting strokes gives lines of text a lively shimmer. The ampersand and several uppercase forms lean into expressive, single-stroke gestures, which can add charm in short phrases and headings.