Print Deduy 1 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, book covers, headlines, craft branding, handmade, playful, quirky, rustic, casual, handwritten authenticity, casual warmth, textural character, informal display, irregular, angular, wiry, jagged, textured.
This font uses hand-drawn, monoline strokes with a slightly wiry texture and intentionally uneven contours. Forms are generally upright but vary in width and proportion, giving the alphabet a lively, irregular rhythm. Many curves are rendered as faceted, polygon-like arcs rather than smooth bowls, and terminals often taper to sharp points. Spacing and stroke edges feel organically inconsistent, reinforcing a drawn-on-paper look while maintaining clear, readable letter skeletons.
It works best for headlines, short paragraphs, and display settings where a handmade voice is desired—such as posters, book covers, packaging, and craft-leaning branding. The textured, faceted strokes can add personality to quotes, labels, and titles, especially when paired with a calmer companion for longer reading.
The overall tone is casual and expressive, with a quirky, homemade character that feels friendly and a bit mischievous. Its angular, sketch-like construction suggests an informal, human presence rather than polished geometry, lending a lightly rustic, illustrative mood to text.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with an intentionally rough edge: recognizable print letterforms kept slightly inconsistent to preserve authenticity and warmth. The faceted curves and tapered terminals emphasize a drawn tool feel and help the font read as expressive rather than mechanical.
Uppercase shapes lean broad and open, while lowercase maintains simple, print-like construction with modest ascenders/descenders and noticeable per-letter variability. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic, with angular counters and uneven stroke weight that matches the letters. The sample text shows consistent legibility at display and short-text sizes, where the irregular edge detail reads as texture rather than noise.