Print Dadaj 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, game ui, playful, mystical, handmade, storybook, whimsical, add personality, evoke fantasy, handmade feel, display impact, friendly charm, tapered, calligraphic, brushy, spiky, organic.
A lively hand-drawn print with tapered, brush-like strokes and subtly sharpened terminals that often end in points or wedge cuts. Letterforms mix rounded bowls with occasional narrow pinched joins, creating a lively rhythm and slightly irregular texture across a line. Curves are smooth but not geometric, and many characters show a gentle swelling through curves with quick, flicked exits, giving the set a drawn-in-one-pass feel. Overall spacing reads open and readable, while the silhouette remains energetic due to frequent pointed tips and varying internal counters.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where personality matters: headlines, posters, event flyers, book or chapter titles, packaging, and themed graphics. It can work for brief interface labels or game/UI elements when a handmade, fantasy-leaning flavor is desired, but it’s less ideal for dense body copy or small sizes where the pointed terminals and lively stroke modulation may crowd together.
The font conveys a whimsical, slightly arcane tone—playful and imaginative with hints of fantasy signage or storybook titling. Its flicked terminals and spiky accents add a touch of drama without becoming aggressive, keeping the mood friendly and crafty rather than gothic or formal.
The design appears intended to emulate quick brush or marker lettering while maintaining consistent, legible printed shapes. Its aim is to add character and narrative flavor—suggesting handcrafted charm and a touch of magical or adventurous styling—without relying on connected script forms.
Uppercase forms tend to feel more emblematic and decorative, while lowercase stays conversational, producing a natural headline-to-text hierarchy. Numerals follow the same tapered, brushy logic, with curvy, expressive shapes that suit display use better than tabular or data-driven settings.