Print Mubik 5 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, stickers, greeting cards, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, childlike, approachability, handmade feel, informal clarity, playful tone, rounded, bubbly, chunky, soft, organic.
A rounded, marker-like handwritten print with chunky strokes and softly blunted terminals. Letterforms are simple and open, with gently uneven curves and slight wobble that preserves an authentic hand-drawn rhythm. Counters are generous and shapes lean toward circular construction, while width and spacing vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal texture. The overall silhouette is bold and smooth rather than scratchy, keeping forms legible at display and comfortable at short text lengths.
Well suited for children’s materials, playful branding, crafts, packaging, and short display copy where a friendly handmade voice is desired. It works especially well in posters, stickers, classroom resources, invitations, and greeting cards, and can also serve for captions or headings in casual layouts where warmth matters more than strict formality.
The font reads warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, everyday tone that feels like notes written with a felt-tip pen. Its rounded forms and mild irregularities give it a personable, kid-friendly character without becoming messy or chaotic. Overall, it suggests fun, friendliness, and a casual handmade charm.
The design appears intended to capture the look of neat, hand-printed lettering made with a thick pen, prioritizing approachability and readability. Its softened corners, rounded bowls, and controlled irregularity aim to feel human and informal while remaining clear and consistent across a full basic character set.
Capitals are compact and rounded, with simplified geometry (notably in forms like E, F, and T) that emphasizes clarity over strict typographic precision. The lowercase maintains a consistent handwritten logic, including single-story a and g, and softly modeled joins in letters like m and n. Numerals match the same friendly, rounded construction and sit comfortably alongside the alphabet.