Print Widev 11 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, branding, packaging, headlines, quotes, elegant, airy, personal, refined, romantic, handwritten polish, graceful display, personal tone, elegant rhythm, calligraphic, slanted, looped, sinuous, delicate.
This typeface presents as a slender, handwritten print with a consistent rightward slant and a lightly calligraphic stroke. Letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented, with smooth, continuous curves and occasional looped joins inside individual glyphs (notably in capitals and descenders), while remaining generally unconnected in running text. Strokes show gentle modulation—thin entry/exit hairlines with slightly fuller downstrokes—creating an airy texture and crisp word shapes. Ascenders are tall and descenders are long and sweeping, and the lowercase sits low relative to those extensions, contributing to a graceful, elongated rhythm.
This font is well suited to short to medium-length display settings where a personal, elegant tone is desired—such as invitations, greeting cards, boutique branding, packaging, social graphics, and pull quotes. It can also work for subheads or short captions when generous size and spacing preserve its fine strokes and narrow proportions.
The overall tone feels intimate and polished, like neat handwriting used for formal notes or invitations. Its slanted posture and delicate contrasts convey a soft elegance, balancing casual human warmth with a more refined, display-friendly presence.
The design appears intended to capture a clean, stylish handwriting feel—more polished than casual scribble—while maintaining enough regularity for consistent word shapes in display copy. Its narrow build, tall extenders, and restrained stroke modulation suggest an emphasis on graceful rhythm and a refined, note-like character.
Capitals are expressive and slightly more flamboyant than the lowercase, with curved terminals and occasional flourish-like hooks that help lead into following letters. Numerals follow the same narrow, handwritten logic, with open curves and simple, legible forms that keep the color light on the page.