Print Waniz 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, book covers, labels, quirky, handmade, playful, folksy, casual, hand-lettered feel, space-saving display, playful character, condensed, tall, spindly, wiry, brushed.
A tall, condensed hand-drawn print with wiry strokes and subtly uneven contours. Letterforms are narrow with long verticals, compact bowls, and slightly wobbly outlines that suggest a marker or dry-brush tool. Corners are softly rounded rather than sharply geometric, and stroke endings vary between blunt and lightly tapered, creating a lively, imperfect rhythm. Spacing and widths shift from glyph to glyph, adding a handmade cadence while keeping overall alignment and structure consistent enough for continuous text.
Works best in short to medium display settings where personality is a priority—posters, headlines, packaging, labels, and cover titling. It can also suit quotes or section headers when you want a casual, hand-lettered feel, but its condensed proportions and textured edges are most effective at moderate-to-large sizes.
The overall tone is quirky and approachable, with a slightly spooky or storybook flavor created by the tall, skinny silhouettes and irregular brush texture. It reads as informal and characterful—more like hand-lettered signage than a polished text face.
Likely designed to capture the charm of quick hand lettering in a tall, space-saving format, balancing legibility with a deliberately imperfect, brushy texture. The consistent narrow stance and lively outlines suggest an intention to evoke handmade signage and playful display typography.
Uppercase forms feel especially narrow and upright, while lowercase shows simple, print-like construction with minimal joining and a few idiosyncratic details (notably in curved letters and diagonals). Numerals match the same narrow stance and handmade wobble, keeping a cohesive set for display use.