Print Buber 12 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, greeting cards, social posts, craft labels, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, handwritten feel, friendly voice, everyday notes, casual display, rounded, bouncy, informal, loopy, soft.
A casual handwritten print with rounded terminals and gently irregular curves that mimic marker or brush-pen strokes. Letterforms are mostly monoline with subtle, natural wobble and a lively rhythm; bowls are open and circular, and joins stay unconnected. Proportions are relaxed and slightly inconsistent by design, with a modest x-height, long ascenders/descenders, and a variable character width that keeps spacing feeling organic rather than mechanical. Numerals follow the same simple, open shapes and soft corners for a cohesive set.
Works well for short-to-medium passages where an informal, personable voice is desired, such as packaging callouts, greeting cards, classroom materials, craft labels, and friendly UI or social graphics. It also suits display lines and headings where a handmade feel adds warmth without becoming overly decorative.
The font conveys an easygoing, friendly tone—more like quick hand lettering than formal typography. Its soft shapes and loose rhythm feel welcoming and playful, suitable for messages meant to sound personal and unpretentious.
Likely designed to emulate neat, everyday hand printing—clean enough for readability, but intentionally imperfect to preserve a human, sketchbook-like character. The goal appears to be a versatile casual script substitute for brands and designs that want approachability over precision.
Stroke endings tend to taper slightly or round off, and several capitals show simplified, single-stroke constructions that enhance the handwritten impression. Overall texture stays readable at text sizes while retaining visible human irregularities in curves and alignment.