Print Dykul 11 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, children’s books, posters, craft branding, social graphics, casual, friendly, playful, youthful, handmade, handwritten warmth, casual legibility, playful tone, personal voice, monoline, rounded, loopy, bouncy, quirky.
A casual handwritten print face with a monoline feel and softly rounded terminals. Strokes show subtle, natural wobble and slight angle variation, creating an easy, drawn rhythm rather than strict geometric consistency. Letterforms are open and simplified, with modest overshoots and gently inflated curves; proportions vary a bit from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the handmade character. Ascenders and descenders are relatively prominent, and the figures follow the same light, sketchy construction with simple, open shapes.
Well suited to short, friendly messaging such as greeting cards, invitations, classroom materials, kids-oriented packaging, and casual posters. It also works nicely for social media graphics, headings, and pull quotes where a personable handwritten tone is desirable.
The overall tone is approachable and informal, with a breezy, human warmth. Its bouncy, slightly quirky forms read as personal and conversational—more like a neat marker note than a formal script.
Designed to capture the look of quick, tidy hand lettering: informal, legible, and expressive without joining strokes. The emphasis appears to be on an easygoing, everyday feel that stays readable while retaining natural variation.
In running text, the lively baseline and variable character widths add texture and movement. The forms stay unconnected and generally clear, but the intentionally loose construction can make long passages feel busy at smaller sizes compared with more regular text faces.