Print Birul 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, packaging, labels, quirky, whimsical, homespun, playful, rustic, handmade feel, expressive display, casual tone, storybook flavor, sketchy, wobbly, spidery, compact, organic.
A compact, hand-drawn print with tall, slender proportions and slightly uneven letter widths that create a lively rhythm. Strokes look like quick pen or marker lines: mostly monoline with subtle thick–thin variation, rounded terminals, and occasional soft blobs at joins and endpoints. Curves are gently irregular and counters are small, producing a dark, scribbly texture at text sizes. The lowercase is notably small relative to the ascenders, with narrow, vertical forms and simple, unconnected construction across the alphabet and figures.
Works best for short display text where personality matters—posters, book or zine covers, packaging, labels, and playful branding. It can also suit themed pieces (crafty, quirky, or lightly eerie) when used at larger sizes with generous tracking.
The overall tone is informal and characterful, like handwritten labeling or a doodled note. Its narrow, wiry shapes and jittery contours give it a quirky, slightly spooky storybook energy while still staying friendly and approachable.
The design reads as an intentionally imperfect, hand-rendered print meant to feel personal and analog. Its narrow, tall structure and irregular stroke behavior appear aimed at delivering expressive texture and charm rather than strict typographic uniformity.
Spacing appears on the tight side, which increases the dense, inky color in longer lines. Numerals follow the same hand-made logic, with simplified shapes and rounded ends that match the letters.