Print Dilaw 8 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: notes, greeting cards, kids content, packaging, posters, casual, friendly, playful, handmade, approachable, handwritten feel, personal tone, quick lettering, human texture, monoline, rounded, loopy, bouncy, irregular.
A monoline, hand-drawn print face with softly rounded terminals and gently wobbly strokes that preserve a marker/pen feel. Letterforms lean slightly back, with open counters and simplified construction, giving the alphabet an airy, uncluttered look. Proportions are informal and uneven in a natural way—curves vary subtly, widths fluctuate from glyph to glyph, and spacing feels hand-set rather than mechanically uniform. Numerals match the same loose rhythm, with simple, open shapes and occasional quirky hooks and loops.
This font suits informal communication where a handmade voice is desired: notes, invitations, greeting cards, kid-focused materials, and friendly packaging or labels. It can also work for headings or short passages on posters and social graphics when a casual, personable texture is more important than strict typographic regularity.
The overall tone is relaxed and personable, like quick note-taking or classroom handwriting. Its mild backward slant and buoyant curves add a playful, conversational character without becoming overly decorative. The texture reads as human and spontaneous, lending warmth and approachability.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand lettering—clean enough to remain legible, but intentionally irregular to retain a natural, drawn-by-hand charm. It emphasizes warmth and personality over precision, aiming for an everyday handwritten print look.
Uppercase forms are straightforward and readable, while lowercase introduces more personality through looped joins and varied descenders (notably in letters like g, j, and y). The baseline and cap-line adherence is intentionally imperfect, creating a lively, hand-rendered cadence in longer text.