Print Tuluz 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, branding, packaging, signage, playful, storybook, rustic, whimsical, handmade, expressive display, handcrafted feel, informal charm, rustic texture, brushy, chiseled, irregular, angular, tapered.
This font shows hand-drawn, brush-like construction with energetic, slightly irregular outlines and tapered stroke endings. Letterforms are chunky and compact, with a generally low x-height and prominent, uneven capitals that create a lively rhythm. Strokes suggest a broad-pen or brush influence: joins are sometimes pointed, curves can be slightly faceted, and terminals often finish in wedge-like points. Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a natural, hand-rendered feel while remaining legible at display sizes.
Best suited for short-to-medium display settings such as posters, book covers, game or event graphics, packaging callouts, and storefront-style signage. It can work for large pull quotes or section headers where a handcrafted texture is desirable, but it will read busiest in dense body copy due to its strong rhythmic variation and textured strokes.
The overall tone is playful and storybook-like, with a rustic, handcrafted personality. Its imperfect contours and lively movement evoke casual signage, fantasy or folklore titling, and informal editorial headlines where charm and character matter more than typographic neutrality.
The design appears intended to deliver an approachable, hand-lettered display voice with a touch of brush/pen drama—capturing the spontaneity of drawn lettering while keeping forms recognizable and readable. Its variable widths and tapered terminals suggest an emphasis on personality and visual texture for expressive titling.
Capitals carry most of the visual weight and feel especially expressive, while lowercase letters remain simple and compact. Numerals follow the same handmade logic, with uneven curves and pointed terminals that keep them visually consistent with the alphabet. In longer text, the pronounced texture and irregular stroke behavior become a defining feature rather than a background voice.