Print Dibot 8 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, packaging, social posts, book covers, casual, whimsical, airy, friendly, playful, human warmth, casual readability, handmade texture, lighthearted tone, monolinear, spiky terminals, tapered strokes, loose rhythm, organic.
A light, handwritten print with thin, mostly monoline strokes and occasional tapered swelling that suggests a quick pen. Letterforms are tall and somewhat condensed, with open counters and generous internal space that keeps the texture airy. Strokes end in pointed, slightly spiky terminals, and curves are drawn with a loose, organic wobble rather than strict geometry. Uppercase forms are simplified and slightly irregular, while lowercase shows a modest x-height with long ascenders and descenders; spacing and widths vary naturally from glyph to glyph.
This font works well for short to medium text where a casual, handmade feel is desired—cards, invitations, quotes, light branding, packaging labels, and social graphics. It can also serve as a friendly accent on book covers or chapter openers, especially at larger sizes where the delicate strokes and pointed terminals remain clear.
The overall tone feels informal and personable, like neat notes written with a fine felt-tip or pen. Its slight angularity and pointy terminals add a quirky, storybook charm without becoming decorative script. The uneven rhythm reads as human and relaxed, giving copy a friendly, conversational voice.
The design appears intended to capture an authentic, lightly drawn handwriting voice—neat enough for readability, but intentionally irregular to preserve a human, spontaneous character. It balances simple printed structures with subtle quirks so it can function as an everyday informal text face rather than a connected script.
Round letters (like O, C, e) stay open and lightly drawn, while diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) show brisk, confident strokes that can appear sharper at joins. Numerals match the same thin, handwritten construction, with a simple, legible 0 and softly looped 8 and 9 that blend well in running text.