Print Wamim 1 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social graphics, quirky, hand-drawn, lively, casual, angular, handmade feel, distinct texture, dynamic motion, edgy playfulness, monoline, faceted, spiky, narrow-leaning, uneven rhythm.
A hand-drawn, forward-slanted monoline with a distinctly faceted construction: curves are frequently resolved into angled segments and clipped corners, giving many glyphs an octagonal, cut-paper feel. Strokes stay fairly even with lightly irregular joins and terminals, reinforcing a human, drawn rhythm rather than a geometric polish. Proportions are moderately tall and slightly narrow in impression, with open counters and simplified forms; numerals and capitals share the same angular logic, producing a consistent, chiseled silhouette across the set.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where its angular, hand-rendered texture can be a feature—posters, event promos, packaging accents, and brand marks that want an approachable but distinctive edge. It can also work for pull quotes or UI/overlay labels when a casual, crafted voice is desired and ample size is available.
The overall tone is informal and energetic, mixing a sketchbook immediacy with a slightly futuristic, hacked-in look created by the sharp corners and brisk slant. It reads as playful and offbeat rather than formal, with a controlled messiness that suggests personality and motion.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of informal handwriting while imposing a consistent, faceted system that turns rounded shapes into crisp angles. This balances personality with repeatable structure, aiming for a recognizable, graphic voice that stands out in display typography.
The slant and segmented strokes create strong directional flow in words, and the repeated clipped terminals help maintain cohesion even as individual letters vary subtly in stroke behavior. The angular treatment is especially noticeable on rounded characters, which become multi-sided and graphic, lending a distinctive texture in longer lines.