Print Kimul 4 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, kids media, social graphics, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, handmade warmth, approachable clarity, casual personality, friendly display, rounded, soft terminals, monolinear, bouncy rhythm, open apertures.
A rounded, monoline handwritten print with softly blunted terminals and gently uneven stroke behavior that keeps the texture human while remaining consistent. Curves are generously circular (notably in C, O, and G), and joins are smooth, with minimal sharp corners. Proportions lean slightly wide and open, with clear counters and open apertures that help legibility in mixed-case text. The lowercase shows a single-storey a and g, a compact, looped e, and simple, upright forms with modest ascenders/descenders; numerals are similarly rounded, with friendly, open shapes and straightforward construction.
This font fits best where a friendly, handmade feel is desired: packaging, café or boutique branding, posters, classroom materials, children’s media, and social or editorial graphics that need an approachable tone. It can work for short paragraphs and headlines where readability and warmth are both important, especially in mixed-case settings.
The overall tone is warm and informal, like neat marker lettering or careful classroom handwriting. Its rounded geometry and soft stroke endings create a cheerful, approachable voice suited to conversational messaging. The slight irregularities add personality without becoming messy or overly stylized.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy, hand-printed lettering with a soft, rounded finish—balancing charm and clarity. It aims to feel personal and informal while staying structured enough for consistent typographic use across titles and short text blocks.
In the sample text, the font maintains a steady baseline and even color, while small variations in curve tension and stroke width keep a natural, hand-drawn cadence. Uppercase forms read cleanly at display sizes, and lowercase spacing feels airy enough for longer lines without turning mechanical.