Print Ebmas 10 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invites, greeting cards, children’s books, packaging, craft branding, whimsical, storybook, hand-drawn, playful, delicate, hand-drawn charm, decorative accents, friendly display, monoline, loopy, curlicues, airy, ornamental.
This font uses a fine, pen-like line with lightly modulated strokes and an overall monoline impression. Letterforms are upright and relatively narrow, with a compact lowercase and short x-height that makes ascenders and descenders feel prominent. Terminals frequently curl into small hooks, loops, and spirals, creating decorative entry and exit strokes; counters are generally open and round, and several glyphs feature quirky internal dots or loop details. Spacing appears loose enough to keep the thin strokes from crowding, while the rhythm remains intentionally uneven in a hand-drawn way rather than mechanically uniform.
Well-suited to short headlines, titles, and display copy where its fine strokes and ornamental terminals can be appreciated. It works especially well for invitations, greeting cards, children’s or storybook applications, and lighthearted branding or packaging, but is less appropriate for dense body text or small UI sizes due to its delicate construction.
The overall tone is whimsical and charming, with a storybook, crafty feel driven by the curly terminals and playful quirks. It reads as friendly and informal, with a light, airy presence that suggests delicacy rather than boldness.
The design appears intended to capture a neat, hand-drawn print style with added ornamentation—prioritizing personality and charm over strict typographic regularity. Its curled terminals and quirky details aim to make even simple words feel decorative and friendly.
Uppercase forms mix simple structures with occasional flourish, while lowercase shows more calligraphic personality through taller ascenders and looped endings. Numerals follow the same decorative logic, with rounded shapes and occasional curled terminals that keep them consistent with the alphabet.