We report the design, fabrication, and characterization of novel conductometric humidity sensors that employ an ultrathin film of graphene oxide (GO) nanoflakes as transducing element. The GO film is deposited with a shadow mask using an electrospray emitter operated at atmospheric pressure; no post treatments-including annealing or doping-were applied to the GO sensors. The Van der Pauw electrode structure used in the sensor had 50 mu m linewidths separated by 600 mu m and was fabricated with the lift-off metallization technique. In dynamic humidity tests conducted at atmospheric pressure, the sensor tracks the response of a commercial sensor and reacts to changes in humidity in less than 500 ms. There is a quadratic dependence of the relative humidity on the sensor resistance for the relative humidity range between 3% and 63%, with more than a three-fold change in resistance over the range. The power consumption of the sensor is less than 30 mu W while drawing 7 mu A, and less than 15 mu W while drawing 5 mu A. Our devices are promising candidates for deployment in a distributed sensor network due to their low cost, small size, and low power consumption.