Print Tilow 11 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, posters, greeting cards, classroom materials, playful, friendly, casual, whimsical, handmade, human warmth, approachability, informality, readable handprint, cheerful tone, rounded, brushy, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, high legibility.
A rounded, marker-like handwritten with smooth, slightly irregular strokes and gently flared, soft terminals. Letterforms are mostly monoline with subtle pressure variation, and the curves are generously open, keeping counters readable even at heavier stroke widths. Proportions feel lively and human: widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, bowls are plump, and joins are simplified for a clean, unconnected print rhythm. Uppercase is friendly and compact, while the lowercase shows a single-storey construction where expected and a consistent, easy-to-scan silhouette across the alphabet and numerals.
This font suits short to medium-length copy where an approachable, handmade voice is needed—children’s titles, educational worksheets, craft branding, gift tags, packaging callouts, and casual posters. It can also work for social graphics and friendly signage where clear letterforms and a warm tone matter.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with an informal, kid-friendly energy that reads like neat hand lettering with a felt-tip marker. Its bouncy spacing and rounded shapes give it a light, humorous personality without becoming chaotic or hard to read.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy, upbeat hand printing with a marker, balancing charm and consistency so it stays legible in real text. It prioritizes rounded forms, open counters, and simple construction to deliver an informal voice that still performs reliably across mixed-case writing and numerals.
The design maintains strong clarity in dense text thanks to open apertures and restrained quirkiness; the irregularities show up more in width and stroke endings than in extreme baseline wobble. Numerals match the same soft, hand-drawn logic, making them feel cohesive in headlines and short UI-style labels.