Print Ebruh 4 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, labels, quotes, handmade, quirky, casual, playful, sketchy, handwritten feel, human texture, informal tone, quick lettering, monoline, spiky, angular, bouncy, irregular.
A hand-drawn print style with slim, mostly monoline strokes and visibly irregular line quality, as if made with a fine pen or marker. Letterforms are tall and compact with tight internal counters, minimal rounding, and frequent sharp joins; terminals often taper or flick into small hooks. The rhythm is uneven in an intentional, organic way—stroke thickness, curves, and proportions vary from glyph to glyph, and baseline/spacing feel loosely controlled rather than mechanically consistent.
Works best in short bursts—headlines, posters, packaging, labels, and pull quotes—where its hand-rendered texture can be a feature. It can also suit invitations, craft-oriented branding, and informal editorial callouts, especially at medium to large sizes where the irregular strokes remain clear.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a slightly mischievous, offbeat character. Its narrow, wiry shapes and quick pen gestures read as spontaneous and human, giving text a diary-note or hand-labeled feel rather than a polished typographic voice.
Likely designed to mimic quick handwritten print lettering: narrow, energetic characters with a deliberately imperfect finish that adds personality and warmth. The intent appears to prioritize expressive texture and a natural hand rhythm over strict consistency for everyday, casual communication.
Uppercase forms tend to be more structured and sign-like, while lowercase letters look more cursive-influenced despite remaining unconnected, contributing to a mixed, eclectic texture in running text. Numerals follow the same hand-rendered logic with simplified, quick-to-write shapes that reinforce the casual, improvised impression.