Print Damem 8 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, headlines, game titles, event flyers, quirky, storybook, witchy, hand-drawn, vintage, handcrafted feel, thematic display, whimsical mood, spooky flair, angular, spiky, calligraphic, irregular, tapered.
This font uses slender, drawn strokes with pointed terminals and frequent wedge-like cuts that create a subtly jagged silhouette. Curves are slightly flattened and asymmetrical, giving bowls and rounds a hand-shaped feel rather than geometric precision. Strokes show modest modulation with occasional ink-trap-like notches and sharp entry/exit strokes, especially in diagonals and joins. Spacing and widths vary from letter to letter, producing a lively rhythm and an uneven, organic texture in words.
It works best at display sizes where the pointed terminals and irregular stroke details stay crisp—posters, book or chapter titles, game/film titling, and themed event graphics. It can also suit short pull quotes or packaging labels when a handcrafted, slightly spooky or whimsical voice is desired; for long text, its lively texture is better used sparingly.
The overall tone feels mischievous and slightly eerie, like lettering from a fairy-tale prop or a playful horror title. Its spiky terminals and irregular contours add drama and personality without becoming fully distressed. The result is expressive and characterful, leaning toward whimsical display rather than sober neutrality.
The design appears intended to simulate informal hand lettering with a controlled, stylized edge—combining readable letterforms with deliberate spikes, notches, and tapering to create mood. It prioritizes personality and theme-setting over strict uniformity, aiming for expressive titles and decorative emphasis.
Uppercase forms read as stylized caps with angular accents (notably in A, K, V, W, X), while lowercase mixes simple handwritten construction with occasional calligraphic flair (such as the single-storey a and the looped g). Numerals keep the same sharp, tapered logic, with decorative curves and pointed ends that match the alphabet.