Print Amliw 13 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, invitations, social graphics, playful, casual, whimsical, lively, friendly, human warmth, handmade texture, space-saving, casual display, monoline, condensed, bouncy, tall, hand-drawn.
A tall, condensed hand-drawn print face with mostly monoline strokes and a lightly wobbly baseline that keeps the rhythm lively. Letterforms are simplified and open, with narrow bowls, elongated vertical stems, and small, quick terminals that mimic pen lifts. The texture is intentionally uneven—strokes thicken and thin subtly from hand pressure rather than formal contrast—while counters stay clean enough for display reading. Capitals feel lean and linear, and the lowercase shows a notably small x-height with long ascenders and descenders, giving words a stacked, spidery silhouette.
This font performs best in short to medium display settings such as posters, headlines, packaging callouts, invitations, and social graphics where personality matters more than typographic neutrality. The condensed build makes it useful when horizontal space is tight, while the hand-drawn texture helps add warmth to titles, quotes, and labels.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick marker lettering used to label, annotate, or title something by hand. Its tall, narrow shapes and slightly quirky proportions add a whimsical edge that reads as energetic rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to capture quick, legible hand lettering with a tall condensed stance—balancing readability with a deliberately imperfect, human cadence. It aims to feel spontaneous and approachable, as if written with a pen or marker in one pass.
Spacing appears intentionally irregular, reinforcing the handmade feel; some letters sit a touch higher or lower, and widths vary enough to create a conversational cadence. Numerals follow the same narrow, upright logic, pairing well with the letters for headings and short callouts.