Print Wibol 4 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, invites, quotes, casual, friendly, lively, personal, playful, handwritten warmth, casual branding, quick emphasis, approachable display, human touch, brushy, slanted, monoline, loopy, rounded.
A slanted handwritten print with smooth, brush-like strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are mostly unconnected, built from single-pass motions that create a gently uneven rhythm and organic width variation from glyph to glyph. Curves are open and airy, with occasional loops and long entry/exit strokes on letters like g, y, and j; ascenders are tall while the lowercase bodies stay relatively small. Capitals are simplified and flowing, echoing the same pen angle and giving the set a consistent forward motion across words and lines.
Works well for short-to-medium display copy where a human touch is desirable: packaging, café menus, casual posters, social graphics, greeting cards, and quote-style headlines. It can also serve as an accent face paired with a neutral sans for branding and editorial callouts.
The overall tone feels informal and personable, like quick neat handwriting on a note or label. Its forward slant and buoyant curves convey energy and friendliness, leaning toward a relaxed, everyday voice rather than a formal calligraphic one.
The design appears intended to capture quick, legible handwriting with a brush-pen feel—clean enough for headlines but still visibly human. The consistent slant and simplified construction suggest a focus on friendly communication and informal branding rather than precision or strict typographic regularity.
Spacing appears moderately loose in running text, helping the shapes stay readable despite the lively stroke motion. Numerals and uppercase forms follow the same handwritten logic, with rounded, open counters and slightly idiosyncratic proportions that reinforce the hand-drawn character.