Print Gydan 10 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, invitations, social media, friendly, playful, casual, handmade, lively, human warmth, informal voice, handmade charm, energetic emphasis, approachable tone, rounded, brushy, bouncy, warm, organic.
A casual, handwritten-style italic with softly tapered strokes and rounded terminals that suggest a brush or marker pen. Letterforms lean consistently to the right with a lively, slightly bouncy baseline and gently irregular rhythm that keeps the texture human while remaining coherent. Curves are generous and open, joins are smooth, and counters stay clear at text sizes, giving the alphabet an easy, readable flow. Numerals echo the same hand-drawn logic with simple, curved constructions and modest stroke modulation.
This font suits short-to-medium text where a personable, informal voice is desired—such as branding accents, packaging copy, posters, invitations, greeting cards, and social media graphics. It also works well for quotes, headings, and pull-captions where a friendly handwritten texture can add warmth and approachability.
The overall tone feels warm, approachable, and upbeat, like informal handwriting used for friendly notes or personable headlines. Its slanted stance and brushy movement add energy without becoming chaotic, projecting an inviting, conversational character.
The font appears designed to capture the immediacy of neat, everyday handwriting with a brush-leaning stroke quality, balancing charm and readability. Its consistent slant and controlled irregularities aim to deliver an authentic hand-made impression suitable for contemporary casual design.
The design maintains a consistent slant and stroke behavior across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, but preserves small idiosyncrasies (subtle width variation, soft asymmetries) that reinforce the handmade feel. Capitals are clean and relatively simple, pairing well with the more animated lowercase to create a natural reading cadence in mixed-case settings.