Print Veges 8 is a light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, invitations, book covers, whimsical, playful, quirky, storybook, airy, expressiveness, personality, display charm, handmade feel, tall, condensed, spindly, bouncy, hand-drawn.
A tall, condensed handwritten print with airy counters and pronounced thick–thin modulation. Strokes are mostly monoline-thin with occasional heavier downstrokes, creating a calligraphic rhythm without connecting letters. Forms are elongated with narrow proportions, rounded terminals, and gentle, slightly irregular curves that keep the texture lively. Descenders are long and prominent, and overall spacing feels open despite the narrow letterforms, helping the type stay legible at display sizes.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its tall, quirky shapes can be appreciated—such as headlines, posters, packaging accents, invitations, and book or chapter titles. It can also work for pull quotes or branding moments when a delicate, hand-drawn voice is desired, but its fine strokes suggest avoiding very small sizes or low-contrast production.
The font reads as whimsical and lightly eccentric, with a friendly, storybook tone. Its springy verticality and delicate strokes give it a charming, handmade personality that feels informal and expressive rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to provide a distinctive hand-drawn print voice with a narrow footprint, combining delicate strokes with occasional emphasized downstrokes for a lively, calligraphic feel. Its elongated proportions and playful irregularity suggest a focus on character and expressiveness in display typography rather than neutral text setting.
Uppercase and lowercase show noticeable personality differences (some caps are more stylized and looped), and several characters feature distinctive hooks or swashes that add charm in headlines. Numerals are slender and simplified, matching the tall rhythm of the alphabet and reinforcing the font’s display-oriented character.