Print Vadom 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: book covers, headlines, posters, packaging, greeting cards, whimsical, storybook, hand-drawn, quirky, playful, handmade charm, quirky display, storybook tone, textured lettering, spiky serifs, inked, bouncy, tall ascenders, narrow proportions.
A tall, compact handwritten print with lively, uneven rhythm and noticeable stroke-contrast. Forms are narrow and upright, with tapered strokes and sharp, triangular spur-like terminals that read as casual, improvised serifs. Counters are small and slightly irregular, and the baseline feel is gently bouncy rather than strictly mechanical. Lowercase has a short x-height with prominent ascenders/descenders, while caps stay slender and open, maintaining a consistent hand-drawn texture across the set.
Best suited for display typography where personality is desired: book covers, chapter titles, posters, packaging, and short bursts of text in branding or editorial illustration. It can work for brief passages at larger sizes, but the narrow fit and lively stroke modulation suggest using it as an accent rather than for dense body copy.
The overall tone is quirky and storybook-like, combining a slightly spooky, prickly edge with friendly informality. It feels handmade and expressive rather than polished, giving text a characterful, illustrative presence.
Likely intended to emulate quick, inked lettering with a consistent but intentionally imperfect hand. The narrow build, short x-height, and pointed terminals appear designed to add charm and a slightly dramatic flair while remaining readable in headlines.
Letter widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an organic cadence; rounded letters like O/C stay slim while diagonals (K, V, W, X) are more angular and gestural. Numerals follow the same narrow, tapered construction, with distinctive curves and pointed finishes that help them stand out in display settings.