Print Wadet 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, labels, children’s media, playful, quirky, handmade, casual, whimsical, handmade charm, friendly tone, compact display, casual readability, playful branding, condensed, monoline, slightly wobbly, rounded ends, irregular rhythm.
A condensed, hand-drawn print style with monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are tall and narrow with a lightly wobbly baseline and gentle inconsistencies that preserve a natural marker/pen feel. Curves are simplified and slightly angular at turns, counters tend to be tight, and spacing reads lively rather than mechanically even. Ascenders are prominent, descenders are modest, and numerals follow the same narrow, handwritten construction for a cohesive texture.
Best suited to short to medium display copy where a casual, human touch is desirable: posters, headlines, packaging and label work, social graphics, and playful editorial callouts. Its condensed footprint can help fit longer words into tight spaces while keeping an informal tone, making it useful for branding accents and feature text rather than dense body copy.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a quirky, homemade charm. Its narrow, upright forms and slightly uneven rhythm give it an energetic, friendly voice that feels conversational and lighthearted rather than formal or polished.
The design appears intended to capture a quick, confident hand-printed look—like a felt-tip or marker note—while staying structured enough for consistent typesetting. It emphasizes personality and spontaneity through subtle irregularities, paired with narrow proportions for compact, attention-getting display use.
In text, the condensed proportions create a compact, vertical color that stays readable at display sizes while still showing the hand-rendered character. Distinctive, idiosyncratic shapes—especially in curvy letters and diagonals—add personality, but the set maintains consistent stroke weight and a coherent hand-drawn logic across caps, lowercase, and figures.