Print Wugow 15 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, craft branding, children’s titles, playful, quirky, crafty, retro, friendly, hand-drawn texture, playful display, compact titles, retro charm, craft aesthetic, monoline feel, inked outline, tall, condensed, rounded terminals.
A tall, tightly set handwritten print with condensed proportions and a lively, slightly irregular rhythm. Strokes read as dark and assertive, with a distinctive inked look created by inner contour lines that give many letters a subtly outlined, hand-drawn texture. Curves are rounded and soft, while verticals stay mostly straight, producing a clean upright stance with informal detailing. Counters are small and the lowercase is compact, giving the font a dense, punchy color in words and lines of text.
Best suited for display typography where its tall condensed silhouette and inked outline texture can be appreciated—headlines, posters, packaging, labels, and craft-oriented branding. It also works well for playful editorial callouts and children’s or family-friendly titles, where a hand-drawn print voice is desired.
The overall tone is whimsical and approachable, with a DIY, sketchbook character that feels playful rather than polished. Its narrow, tall letters and inky interior striping add a quirky, retro-leaning personality that stands out in short phrases and titles.
The design appears intended to deliver a hand-lettered print style with extra visual character—combining an upright, condensed structure with an inked interior detailing that reads like traced or double-lined marker work. The goal seems to be strong personality and texture while keeping letterforms clear and readable in short-to-medium text runs.
Capital forms are especially narrow and elongated, and the numerals follow the same tall, compact logic, keeping a consistent vertical emphasis across the set. The repeated inner-stroke detailing is a defining motif and becomes a visible texture at display sizes, while remaining a subtle “inked” nuance in larger blocks of text.