Print Ebrit 11 is a light, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, game ui, quirky, scratchy, handmade, wry, storybook, handmade texture, expressive display, informal voice, illustrative mood, angular, spiky, dry-brush, irregular, jittery.
A wiry, hand-drawn print style with slender strokes and a slightly scratchy, dry-brush edge. Letterforms lean on straight stems and sharp joins, with occasional hooked terminals and uneven stroke tapering that suggests quick pen or brush movement. Proportions are condensed and somewhat inconsistent by design, creating a lively rhythm across words; counters are small and open, and the baseline and cap alignment show subtle wobble typical of natural handwriting. Numerals follow the same narrow, gestural construction, with simple, brisk shapes and occasional asymmetry.
Best suited to display applications where personality is the priority—posters, titles, book covers, packaging accents, and playful UI moments in games or creative apps. It can also work for short blurbs or captions when generous spacing and size help preserve its thin, scratchy details.
The overall tone is informal and characterful, reading as quirky and slightly mischievous rather than polished. Its spiky, sketchlike texture adds a handmade immediacy that can feel playful, spooky-adjacent, or whimsical depending on context.
The design appears intended to capture an energetic hand-rendered look—quick, lightly drawn strokes with deliberate irregularity to feel human and expressive. It prioritizes distinctive texture and mood over strict uniformity, aiming for an illustrative, character-driven voice in display typography.
In running text, the pronounced variation in letter widths and the sharp, tapered ends create a distinctive texture that becomes more noticeable at larger sizes. The capital set is especially expressive, with tall, angular silhouettes that stand out for headlines and short phrases.