Print Vadir 11 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, titles, logos, game ui, packaging, edgy, hand-drawn, mischievous, fantasy, punk, expressiveness, handmade feel, dramatic impact, thematic mood, angular, spiky, jagged, brushy, irregular.
A sharp, hand-drawn display face built from angular strokes with wedge-like terminals and frequent pointed joins. The forms show intentional irregularity and variable stroke width, creating a lively, slightly scratchy rhythm across words. Bowls are often faceted rather than smooth, diagonals are prominent, and curves tend to break into corners, giving the alphabet a cut-paper or carved-marker feel. Spacing is loose and uneven in a natural way, with letter widths shifting noticeably from glyph to glyph for an expressive texture in lines of text.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, title treatments, game or fantasy-themed UI, album/cover art, event flyers, and expressive packaging. It can work for brief pull quotes or emphasis in editorial layouts, but the jagged, irregular texture is strongest at larger sizes where the stroke character and pointed terminals can be appreciated.
The overall tone is bold and a bit unruly—suggesting magic, mischief, and DIY attitude. Its spiky silhouettes and rough gesture feel theatrical and story-driven, reading as playful menace rather than polished elegance.
The design appears intended to capture a deliberately rough, hand-rendered look with aggressive angles and a lively, improvised rhythm. It prioritizes personality and atmosphere over neutrality, aiming to add edge and narrative flavor to display typography.
Uppercase characters lean toward dramatic, emblematic shapes, while lowercase retains the same angular DNA with compact, energetic counters and occasional exaggerated hooks. Numerals follow the same pointed construction, keeping the set cohesive for posters and headings.