Print Byril 1 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, headlines, quotes, casual, energetic, personal, lively, improvised, handwritten feel, friendly tone, quick notes, expressive display, casual branding, brushy, slanted, springy, angular, open forms.
A brisk, right-slanted handwritten print with brush-pen character and clean, unconnected letterforms. Strokes show subtle pressure modulation, producing tapered entries/exits and occasional pointed terminals, while counters stay relatively open for a quick, readable rhythm. Proportions are compact in the lowercase with a noticeably low x-height, contrasted by taller ascenders and long, swinging descenders that add vertical movement. Widths vary from narrow, compressed shapes to wider, loopier forms, giving the line a natural, irregular cadence without becoming messy.
Works well for short-to-medium text where a casual, handwritten voice is desired—such as packaging callouts, café/food branding, posters, and social media graphics. It is especially effective in headlines, pull quotes, and titles where the lively slant and brushy terminals can carry personality without requiring tight typographic uniformity.
The overall tone feels informal and human, like quick notes written with confidence. Its slant and sharp flicks convey momentum and spontaneity, while the consistent brush texture keeps it friendly rather than aggressive. The result is expressive and conversational, suited to content that benefits from a personal touch.
Likely intended to mimic fast, everyday handwriting with a brush-pen feel—prioritizing spontaneity, readability, and expressive rhythm over strict geometric consistency. The design balances open shapes with tapered strokes to remain legible while still feeling distinctly hand-made.
Uppercase forms read as simplified, handwritten caps rather than formal calligraphic scripts, and the numerals share the same brisk, slightly angular stroke logic. Spacing and stroke endings create a lightly syncopated texture, especially in longer text, where the varying widths and extended descenders add a dynamic baseline movement.