Print Doboh 10 is a very light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: invitations, greeting cards, packaging, labels, posters, airy, whimsical, delicate, casual, playful, handwritten warmth, friendly display, personal tone, whimsical charm, monoline, hand-drawn, tall, slender, loopy.
A tall, slender handwritten print with a monoline feel and gentle, rounded terminals. The strokes stay consistently thin with small, natural-looking wobbles and occasional looped joins in letters like g, y, and j, giving the outlines a lightly sketched quality rather than geometric precision. Proportions are vertically extended, with narrow bowls and open counters, and spacing is slightly irregular in a way that reinforces the hand-drawn rhythm. Capitals are simple and airy, with smooth curves and minimal ornament, while lowercase forms mix straightforward constructions with a few distinctive loop descenders and elongated ascenders.
Well-suited for invitations, greeting cards, and playful editorial headlines where a personal, handwritten impression is desired. It also works nicely on packaging and labels, especially in short phrases, product names, and display-sized typography where its airy verticality can be appreciated.
The overall tone is lighthearted and friendly, reading like neat handwriting on a note or label. Its tall, floaty rhythm and subtle quirks give it a whimsical, personal character that feels approachable rather than formal.
The design appears intended to capture a tidy, hand-lettered print style with a light, sketch-like touch. Its emphasis on tall proportions, simple forms, and subtle irregularities suggests a goal of adding human warmth and whimsy to display text without moving into connected script.
Numerals follow the same slim, handwritten logic, with rounded shapes and consistent thin strokes; the “8” is drawn as a stacked double-loop, and several figures have slightly open, single-stroke constructions. In text, the long ascenders and descenders create an animated line texture, and the narrow letterforms can make dense paragraphs feel more delicate than robust.