Print Dirit 11 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, headlines, packaging, greeting cards, quirky, playful, whimsical, casual, offbeat, handmade feel, informal tone, expressive display, personal voice, spidery, angular, wiry, sketchy, bouncy.
A wiry, hand-drawn print style with tall, compressed proportions and a consistent right-leaning posture. Strokes are monoline and slightly shaky, with angular joins and occasional hooked terminals that give the outlines a sketch-like immediacy. Counters tend to be narrow and elongated, and the overall rhythm is bouncy, with subtle baseline irregularity and uneven character widths that reinforce the drawn-by-hand feel. Numerals follow the same lean, with simple, open constructions and minimal ornamentation.
Well suited for display applications where a handmade, characterful voice is desired: posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, and casual editorial headlines. It can also work for short UI labels or annotations when a playful, informal tone is appropriate, though longer passages may benefit from generous size and spacing.
The tone is quirky and mischievous—more doodled than designed—suggesting quick notes, handmade signage, or a playful personal voice. Its narrow, lively shapes feel energetic and slightly eccentric, lending a conversational, informal character to headlines and short phrases.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, informal marker or pen lettering with a distinctive lean and compressed silhouette. Its emphasis is on personality and motion rather than strict regularity, aiming to deliver a spontaneous, human texture in display typography.
In text, the tight internal spacing and condensed forms create a compact texture, while the slanted posture adds momentum across a line. The uppercase set reads as tall and animated, and the lowercase keeps a similarly elastic, handwritten cadence, producing a cohesive, idiosyncratic color at display sizes.