Print Ugrap 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, greeting cards, social media, playful, whimsical, friendly, handmade, breezy, handmade charm, casual voice, expressive display, modern lettering, monoline feel, brushed, tall, condensed, loopy.
A tall, condensed hand-drawn print with a lively, slightly irregular rhythm. Strokes alternate between hairline connections and heavier downstrokes, creating a calligraphic, high-contrast feel while maintaining mostly unconnected letterforms. Terminals are soft and rounded with occasional flicks and tapered ends, and curves are drawn with an organic wobble rather than geometric precision. Counters tend to be small and vertical, and the overall texture is airy and upright with noticeable per-glyph width variation.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings such as headlines, invitations, greeting cards, packaging callouts, and social posts where a handmade voice is desired. It can work for brief text snippets when set large with comfortable spacing, but its narrow build and lively stroke contrast make it most effective for titles, quotes, and feature lines.
The font reads as casual and personable, like quick marker or brush lettering refined into a consistent style. Its narrow proportions and springy stroke endings give it a light, upbeat tone suited to friendly, informal messaging. The mix of elegance from the contrast and charm from the irregularities keeps it approachable rather than formal.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering—more polished than raw handwriting, yet still visibly drawn. It aims to deliver a charming, contemporary handmade look with a distinctive tall silhouette and calligraphic contrast for expressive display typography.
Uppercase forms are especially tall and slender, while lowercase introduces more loops and entry/exit strokes that add motion in text. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with simplified shapes and occasional curls, keeping the set cohesive. In longer passages the tight width and contrast produce a distinctive vertical cadence that benefits from generous tracking and leading.