Print Meguf 5 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social ads, stickers, playful, friendly, casual, handmade, warm, handmade feel, friendly display, casual voice, youthful tone, bold signage, rounded, chunky, brushy, bouncy, soft.
A lively handwritten print with thick, rounded strokes and softly tapered terminals that suggest a marker or brush-pen. The letterforms lean slightly and keep a loose, organic baseline rhythm, with uneven widths and gently irregular curves that feel intentionally human. Counters are open and simplified, joins are smooth, and the overall silhouette stays compact and chunky, prioritizing bold shapes over fine detail. Numerals follow the same informal construction with rounded forms and a consistent stroke feel.
Best suited to display settings where an informal, friendly voice is needed—posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, stickers, and branded headings. It also works well for short quotes, invitations, and kid-oriented materials where warmth and legibility at larger sizes are more important than typographic refinement in long passages.
The font reads as upbeat and approachable, with a casual, conversational tone. Its bouncy rhythm and soft, rounded forms give it a kid-friendly, crafty character that feels more personal than polished. The slight slant and brush-like endings add energy without becoming overly messy.
The design appears intended to deliver a personable, hand-drawn feel with confident, heavy strokes and simple, readable shapes. By keeping forms rounded and slightly slanted with natural irregularities, it aims to communicate warmth and energy while remaining clear and cohesive across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Uppercase forms are simple and sign-like, while lowercase letters show more handwritten personality (notably in curved letters and those with looped or hooked descenders). The texture is smooth rather than dry or scratchy, and the heavy strokes make it hold its own in short phrases, though tight spacing and chunky shapes can build density in long text.