Print Ebrat 11 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, quirky, whimsical, sketchy, casual, storybook, handmade feel, quirky display, casual voice, characterful titles, spidery, wiry, loopy, bouncy, tall.
A wiry, hand-drawn print with tall, slender letterforms and a right-leaning stance. Strokes are thin and slightly uneven, with a pen-like rhythm and small, occasional flares at terminals. Curves are narrow and upright-oval, while many glyphs extend noticeably above and below the baseline, creating a rangy vertical profile. Spacing is irregular in an intentional, handwritten way, and the overall texture stays airy and lightly textured rather than dense.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where its quirky, hand-rendered personality can be appreciated—such as headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, and greeting cards. It can also work for pull quotes or small branding accents when ample tracking and line spacing are available.
The tone feels playful and slightly eccentric, like quick notes in a sketchbook or lettering for a whimsical title card. Its narrow, spindly shapes and bouncing rhythm give it a curious, offbeat charm that reads more expressive than formal.
Designed to capture an informal, human touch with a narrow footprint, emphasizing individuality over typographic uniformity. The letterforms prioritize expressive gesture and vertical elegance, aiming for a light, whimsical voice in display settings.
Uppercase forms tend to be especially tall and animated, with occasional exaggerated strokes (notably in letters like J, Q, and Y) that add character. The lowercase set mixes compact bowls with long ascenders/descenders, and the figures follow the same handwritten logic, favoring slim, open shapes over geometric regularity.