Print Gunaf 1 is a very light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: notes, greeting cards, children’s projects, posters, packaging, casual, friendly, playful, hand-drawn, airy, handwritten feel, informal display, personal voice, quick sketch, monoline, loose, spiky terminals, open counters, bouncy rhythm.
A thin, monoline hand-drawn print with a lively, slightly uneven stroke and gently variable widths from glyph to glyph. Forms are simplified and open, with rounded bowls and occasional sharp, tapered terminals that suggest quick pen movement. Curves are a bit wobbly in a natural way, and spacing feels loosely set, giving words an informal, sketchlike texture. Numerals follow the same light, handwritten logic with simple shapes and open interiors.
Well-suited for informal applications such as personal notes, greeting cards, classroom materials, and kid-oriented graphics where a human touch is desirable. It can work for short headlines, captions, and light branding accents on posters or packaging, especially when a relaxed, hand-lettered tone is preferred over strict uniformity.
The font reads as casual and approachable, with an energetic, spontaneous feel. Its irregularities and airy strokes create a friendly, personal tone that leans playful rather than polished or formal.
Likely designed to emulate quick, everyday handwriting in an unconnected print style, prioritizing warmth and personality over typographic regularity. The goal appears to be an easygoing, hand-rendered texture that stays readable in short to medium blocks of text while maintaining a casual, drawn-by-hand character.
Uppercase shapes stay relatively clean and legible while keeping hand-drawn quirks, and lowercase shows more motion and variation (notably in ascenders/descenders and single-storey forms). The overall color on the page is light, so it benefits from generous sizing or higher contrast backgrounds to maintain clarity.