Print Robuj 1 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, café menus, children’s media, social graphics, playful, friendly, casual, bouncy, warm, hand-lettered feel, cheerful display, approachable branding, expressive titles, brushy, rounded, soft, organic, lively.
A slanted, brush-pen styled design with thick, rounded strokes and softly tapered terminals. Letterforms are built from smooth, continuous-looking gestures, with gentle irregularities in curve tension and stroke edges that keep the texture hand-made rather than geometric. Counters are generous and rounded, and the overall silhouette favors bulbous bowls and blunt ends over sharp corners. Spacing and glyph widths vary noticeably, producing a lively rhythm; forms like the lowercase are compact and springy, while capitals remain simple and open for quick recognition.
It performs best in display contexts where personality is desired: posters, headers, packaging callouts, café/food branding, greeting-style graphics, and social media titles. The strong, rounded strokes help it hold up on dark-on-light applications and quick-read phrases, while the energetic rhythm adds charm to short copy.
The font reads as upbeat and personable, with a lighthearted, informal tone. Its bouncy slant and rounded brush shapes evoke handmade signage and cheerful notes, suggesting friendliness and approachability rather than formality or precision.
The design appears intended to capture the feel of quick, confident hand lettering with a brush pen—smooth, rounded, and slightly imperfect—while staying legible in headline sizes. Its proportions and stroke endings prioritize friendliness and motion, aiming for an expressive, approachable voice suitable for casual branding.
The character set shows consistent brush logic across letters and numerals, with a slightly “wet ink” feel from rounded joins and soft tapering. At larger sizes the quirky, handwritten details become a feature, while at smaller sizes the thick strokes and lively irregularity can dominate the texture, making it better suited to short, expressive text than dense paragraphs.