Print Wibab 4 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, social graphics, packaging, quotes, headlines, casual, energetic, friendly, handmade, expressive, handwritten feel, quick brush, personal tone, display impact, brushy, slanted, loose, textured, monoline-ish.
An informal brush-pen script with unconnected, slanted letterforms and a lively, variable rhythm. Strokes show a subtle pressure modulation—thicker on downstrokes and lighter on upstrokes—with tapered entries and exits that mimic quick handwriting. Shapes are compact and upright-to-right-leaning with narrow sidebearings, and proportions vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a spontaneous, hand-drawn feel. Capitals are taller and more gestural, while lowercase is simplified and compact with small counters and a generally restrained x-height.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where a casual handwritten voice is desirable—posters, social media graphics, product packaging, cafe-style signage, and pull quotes. It can also work for brand accents and subheads when paired with a neutral text face.
The font reads as approachable and energetic, with a quick, confident handwritten cadence. Its brushy strokes and slightly uneven pacing give it a personal, conversational tone that feels modern and informal rather than formal calligraphic.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of fast brush handwriting in a consistent, reusable alphabet. The emphasis appears to be on expressive motion, tapered stroke endings, and a friendly, informal tone that stays legible at display sizes.
Diacritics are not shown; the displayed set emphasizes a straightforward A–Z/a–z/0–9. Numerals follow the same handwritten logic, with simple, swept forms that match the letter slant and stroke taper. The texture is clean but retains a natural stroke edge, suggesting a marker or brush pen rather than a rigid geometric construction.