Print Diruk 8 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: notes, personal cards, craft labels, children’s projects, light headlines, airy, casual, quirky, delicate, youthful, handwritten feel, informal clarity, friendly tone, sketch aesthetic, monoline, sketchy, loose, slanted, spare.
A very thin, monoline handwritten print with a consistent right-leaning slant and gently irregular geometry. Forms are built from long, lightly curved strokes and open counters, with frequent taper-like endings that feel pen-drawn rather than constructed. Round letters (O, C, G, Q) are wide and softly oval, while many verticals and diagonals are slightly wobbly, creating an intentionally imperfect rhythm. Spacing feels loose and variable, and several capitals are tall and narrow with understated crossbars and simple joins.
This font suits short, casual text where a human touch is desired—notes, invitations, small labels, and craft-oriented branding. It also works for light display lines and headings in layouts that can accommodate its thin strokes and relaxed spacing.
The overall tone is light, informal, and slightly whimsical, like neat notebook lettering done with a fine pen. Its fragility and generous openness give it a friendly, understated personality rather than a bold or assertive one.
The design appears intended to mimic fine-pen handwriting with a clean, printed structure—prioritizing an approachable, doodled clarity over typographic precision. Its slant and slight irregularities suggest a deliberately natural, unforced writing gesture.
Uppercase and lowercase share a similar stroke logic, but with noticeable size and proportion shifts that reinforce the hand-drawn character. Numerals are similarly spare and airy, keeping the same slanted, lightly curved construction as the letters.