Print Dabub 5 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, kids, greeting cards, social graphics, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, human touch, informality, approachability, everyday lettering, rounded, bouncy, loose, monoline, soft terminals.
A casual handwritten print with rounded, slightly wobbly strokes and a mostly monoline feel, letting small variations in thickness and curvature show through. The forms are open and airy, with generous counters and smooth, softened terminals rather than sharp joins. Proportions vary subtly from letter to letter, creating an organic rhythm; several glyphs lean into simple, single-storey constructions and gently irregular geometry that reads as drawn rather than engineered. Numerals follow the same informal logic, with curved shapes and lightly uneven contours that keep the texture consistent in mixed text.
Well suited to packaging, posters, and social graphics where an approachable, handmade voice is desirable. It can also work nicely for kid-oriented materials, greetings, invitations, and craft or lifestyle branding, especially in short paragraphs, captions, and display settings where its informal texture can be appreciated.
The overall tone is warm and easygoing, with a playful, human presence that feels conversational rather than formal. Its slightly bouncy baseline and imperfect symmetry suggest spontaneity and friendliness, lending a relaxed, everyday character to headlines and short reads.
Likely designed to capture the feel of neat hand lettering in a clean, readable print style—prioritizing warmth and personality while staying clear enough for general-purpose messaging.
Uppercase forms are straightforward and legible with softened corners, while lowercase keeps a simple, print-like structure that maintains clarity at text sizes. Spacing appears moderately loose and even enough for continuous reading, though the hand-drawn irregularities remain visible as texture, especially in repeated letters.