Print Ebliy 5 is a very light, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, hand-drawn, whimsical, quirky, airy, literary, handmade texture, playful tone, distinct display, personal voice, storybook feel, monoline, spiky terminals, irregular rhythm, tall ascenders, loose spacing.
A lightly drawn handwritten print with slim, high-contrast strokes and an intentionally irregular, hand-inked rhythm. Letterforms are mostly upright with variable character widths, tall ascenders/descenders, and a comparatively small x-height that makes lowercase feel delicate. Strokes taper into sharp, slightly spiky terminals and occasional ink-bloom blobs, while curves are open and a bit wobbly, reinforcing the drawn-by-hand texture. Overall spacing is loose and uneven in a natural way, giving lines a lively, sketchbook cadence.
Best suited to display settings where a handmade voice is an asset: headlines, posters, titles, book covers, and themed packaging. It also works well for short blurbs, pull quotes, and greeting-card style messaging, especially when a quirky, personal tone is desired rather than dense body text.
The font conveys a whimsical, offbeat personality—casual and expressive rather than polished. Its airy lightness and quirky details suggest a playful, storybook tone with a slightly gothic/witchy edge in the sharper terminals and tall proportions.
The design appears intended to mimic quick pen or brush lettering in an unconnected print style, preserving natural variation and small imperfections to feel personal and crafted. Its tall proportions and sharp tapering terminals aim to add character and distinctiveness at larger sizes.
Caps lean toward narrow, angular silhouettes (notably in letters like M, N, W, and Y), while many lowercase shapes are simplified and single-storey, enhancing the informal feel. Numerals are similarly hand-drawn and slightly inconsistent in width and curvature, matching the alphabet’s organic texture.