Print Ebnon 11 is a very light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: quotes, greeting cards, personal branding, packaging, social graphics, airy, casual, delicate, playful, intimate, handwritten charm, light elegance, casual clarity, personal tone, monoline, spindly, looped, tall, slanted.
A slender handwritten print with a lightly slanted, monoline feel and an airy, open rhythm. Strokes are fine and slightly elastic, with gentle curves and occasional looped terminals that suggest quick pen movement rather than rigid construction. Proportions are tall and narrow overall, with small counters and a notably petite lowercase body relative to the long ascenders and descenders. Capitals are simple and upright-in-spirit but softly irregular, while lowercase forms stay unconnected and maintain a consistent, lightly sketchy stroke quality.
Best suited for short to medium-length text where a light, handwritten personality is desired—quotes, invitations, cards, captions, and lifestyle branding. It can work well on packaging and social graphics when set with comfortable tracking and ample line spacing to preserve its delicate strokes. For longer passages, larger sizes help maintain clarity due to the fine stroke weight and compact lowercase proportions.
The font reads as relaxed and personal, like neat notes written with a fine-tip pen. Its light presence and tall, looping gestures give it a soft, whimsical tone without becoming overly decorative. The overall impression is friendly and informal, suited to content that benefits from a human touch.
The design intention appears to be a clean, contemporary handwritten print that stays legible while preserving natural pen irregularities. It emphasizes a light, elegant line and tall proportions to create a refined, breezy handwritten voice appropriate for friendly display typography.
Spacing appears generous, enhancing the airy texture, and the baseline/shape irregularities are subtle enough to keep the style coherent. Several letters and numerals use simplified, handwritten constructions with occasional extended entry/exit strokes, which adds charm but makes the design feel more display-oriented than utilitarian at very small sizes.