Print Sebal 11 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, headlines, social graphics, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, youthful, handmade warmth, approachability, casual emphasis, playful display, rounded, soft, chunky, monoline, brushy.
A rounded, chunky handwritten print with soft terminals and a subtly brush-like stroke texture. Letterforms lean on simple, slightly irregular geometry with gently wobbling curves and occasional asymmetry, giving it a drawn-by-hand rhythm rather than strict typographic precision. Strokes are mostly monoline with mild swelling at joins and ends, and counters tend toward open, friendly shapes that stay readable at display sizes. Capitals are tall and simple, while lowercase forms are compact and bouncy, with single-storey shapes where expected and a generally smooth, unbroken flow between strokes.
This font works best for playful headlines, short paragraphs, and branding that benefits from a friendly handmade voice—such as children’s products, casual packaging, café menus, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It can also suit signage or labels where warmth and legibility are more important than typographic neutrality.
The font reads as warm and approachable, with an informal, kid-friendly charm. Its unevenness feels intentional and personable, suggesting spontaneity and a lighthearted, conversational tone rather than formality.
The design appears intended to mimic a confident marker or brush-pen print: bold enough to stand out, rounded to feel welcoming, and irregular enough to preserve a human touch. It prioritizes personality and readability in display-oriented settings over strict consistency or formal refinement.
The character set shows consistent rounding across corners and diagonals, and the numerals share the same hand-drawn softness, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive. Spacing in the sample text appears airy enough to keep the dense, dark shapes from clumping, though the heavy forms emphasize word shapes strongly in longer lines.