Print Diguv 1 is a very light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, kids projects, social graphics, posters, playful, casual, quirky, friendly, hand-drawn, handwritten feel, casual voice, human warmth, informal display, note-taking, monoline, unconnected, rounded, wiry, irregular.
A wiry, monoline handwritten print with gently irregular stroke flow and slightly wavering curves. Forms are mostly open and rounded with occasional angular joins, and the rhythm is loose with noticeable variation in character widths and sidebearings. Terminals tend to be blunt or softly tapered, with small kinks and asymmetries that preserve a drawn-by-hand feel. Numerals follow the same light, sketchy construction with simple, readable shapes.
Works well for applications that benefit from an informal, hand-labeled voice such as greeting cards, craft and kids-oriented materials, packaging accents, social posts, and lightweight poster headlines. It’s best used at display sizes or in short-to-medium passages where its airy strokes and irregular spacing read as character rather than distraction.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a playful, slightly quirky energy. Its uneven baseline and organic stroke behavior evoke quick notes, doodles, and hand-labeled captions rather than polished typography. It feels approachable and relaxed, emphasizing human presence over precision.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, unconnected handwritten printing with a light, sketch-like line and natural inconsistency. It prioritizes friendliness and spontaneity over strict geometric consistency, aiming for an authentic pen-on-paper impression in digital type.
Uppercase letters are simple and airy, while lowercase shapes keep a compact, note-like presence and can look delicate at small sizes due to the fine line weight. Spacing is intentionally inconsistent, contributing to the casual rhythm but requiring mindful tracking in longer settings. The sample text shows good legibility in short phrases, with a distinctly hand-rendered texture across lines.