Print Dirad 1 is a very light, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, greeting cards, playful, whimsical, handmade, casual, airy, handwritten feel, friendly display, quirky character, light touch, monoline, spiky terminals, loopy, bouncy, irregular rhythm.
A delicate, hand-drawn print with thin hairline strokes and sharp, tapered terminals that occasionally flare into small inked wedges. Letterforms are mostly upright with a lively, uneven rhythm: stems vary subtly in thickness, curves are slightly lopsided, and joins feel drawn rather than constructed. Capitals are tall and narrow with generous internal space, while lowercase stays simple and open, with single-storey forms and lightly looped ascenders/descenders. Numerals are similarly spare and linear, keeping a light, sketch-like presence and a softly inconsistent baseline that reinforces the handmade character.
Best suited to display settings where its airy strokes and quirky texture can read clearly—short headlines, posters, packaging callouts, and cover titling. It can also work for brief captions or pull quotes at larger sizes, especially in friendly or offbeat branding contexts.
The overall tone is lighthearted and quirky, like quick pen lettering used for notes, labels, or a casual headline. Its spiky tips and bouncy spacing give it an energetic, slightly eccentric personality without becoming messy or aggressive.
The design appears intended to capture an informal, handwritten print look with a refined, light touch—combining legible, simple structures with expressive pen-like terminals and slight irregularities to feel personal and human.
Stroke endings often come to needle-like points (notably on diagonals and verticals), creating a distinctive prickly texture in longer lines of text. Some glyphs show intentional idiosyncrasies—such as asymmetric bowls and occasional thicker stroke accents—that read as natural pen pressure rather than geometric modulation.