Print Tymis 13 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, children’s, craft branding, social graphics, playful, friendly, handmade, quirky, casual, handwritten charm, casual display, friendly tone, compact impact, rounded, bouncy, brushy, inked, irregular.
A compact, hand-drawn print face with thick, rounded strokes and softly tapered terminals that feel marker- or brush-made. The letterforms are narrow and vertically oriented, with gently uneven stroke edges and small, natural variations in width and curvature that create a lively rhythm. Counters are generally tight and simplified, and bowls and joins lean toward rounded, blobby connections rather than crisp geometry. Uppercase forms are tall and narrow with modest crossbars, while lowercase shapes stay compact with short ascenders/descenders; overall spacing reads slightly variable and organic rather than mechanically even.
Well-suited to short headlines, labels, packaging callouts, posters, and social graphics where a friendly handmade feel is desired. It also fits children’s materials, classroom-style projects, and casual branding that benefits from an approachable, hand-lettered texture.
The font conveys a warm, informal tone—cheerful and approachable with a slightly quirky, handmade charm. Its bouncy proportions and inky softness suggest personal notes, craft signage, and kid-friendly or lighthearted messaging rather than formal or technical voice.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering—clean enough to read as a consistent font, but irregular enough to retain the spontaneity of drawn letters. Its narrow stance and heavy stroke weight aim to deliver high impact and personality in compact display settings.
The numerals match the same hand-rendered logic: narrow silhouettes, rounded corners, and casual construction, keeping the set visually consistent. In text, the dark color and condensed rhythm make it eye-catching at display sizes, while the simplified shapes and tight counters can feel dense if set too small or tightly tracked.