Print Udral 1 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, branding, playful, casual, expressive, handmade, energetic, handmade feel, high impact, casual voice, display texture, friendly tone, brushy, rounded, organic, bouncy, textured.
A brushy, marker-like handwritten face with compact proportions and lively, slightly slanted letterforms. Strokes show visible pressure variation and ragged edges, giving a textured, hand-rendered feel rather than a polished outline. Counters are small and often asymmetrical, terminals are blunt or softly tapered, and curves are rounded with occasional sharp turns where the stroke changes direction. Overall rhythm is uneven in an intentional way, with gently wobbly baselines and variable character widths that enhance the drawn-by-hand character while remaining readable in short runs.
Well-suited for posters, headlines, packaging, and social graphics where a handmade voice is desirable. It can add warmth to branding elements like tags, labels, and short slogans, and works best when given enough size and spacing to let the brush texture and irregular rhythm read clearly.
The font conveys an informal, upbeat tone—friendly and spontaneous, like quick hand-lettering on a poster or label. Its energetic stroke movement and imperfect edges suggest immediacy and personality rather than refinement, making it feel approachable and crafty.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, confident brush-pen printing with a bold, compact silhouette and visible hand movement. Its goal is to provide an expressive, informal display option that looks personal and energetic while staying legible for short-to-medium text snippets.
Capitals are tall and attention-grabbing, while lowercase forms stay compact and simplified, reinforcing a casual print style. Numerals share the same brush texture and rounded construction, keeping the set visually consistent in mixed copy. The overall texture becomes more prominent as size increases, where the rough stroke edges read as a deliberate stylistic feature.