Print Dagis 12 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, zines, album covers, packaging, quirky, playful, mischievous, handmade, indie, informality, personality, energy, distinctiveness, display, condensed, tapered terminals, inked, scratchy, uneven rhythm.
A condensed, marker-and-pen style print face with strong contrast between thick fills and hairline strokes. Many letters combine rounded, blobby counters with sharp tapered terminals, producing a jagged, scratchy edge in places while staying mostly upright. Proportions are inconsistent in a deliberate, handmade way, with narrow bodies, tight interior space on some glyphs, and occasional exaggerated ascenders/descenders that create a bouncy texture in text.
Best suited for display uses such as posters, zines, album/mixtape covers, game UI headers, event flyers, and packaging accents where a handmade voice is desired. It can also work for pull quotes, stickers, and social graphics, especially at larger sizes where the contrast and quirky details stay clear.
This font feels lively and slightly mischievous, with an improvised, hand-drawn confidence. The uneven rhythm and ink-like flicks give it a playful, indie tone that can read as quirky, casual, and a bit spooky when set large.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-drawn lettering—mixing bold, filled strokes with quick hairline cuts to keep the texture active. Its condensed shapes and animated terminals suggest a focus on expressive headings and short bursts of text where character matters more than polish.
The numerals and uppercase have especially bold, graphic silhouettes, while several lowercase forms lean more wiry and calligraphic, creating a noticeable mixed-texture effect. Spiky joins and occasional vertical hairline spikes (notably in letters like i/l/t forms) contribute to a bristly, ink-scratch character that becomes more pronounced in continuous text.