Print Tukut 5 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, kids media, craft branding, social graphics, playful, quirky, friendly, casual, hand-drawn, handmade feel, informal display, friendly voice, space saving, rounded, soft, bouncy, irregular, organic.
A compact, hand-drawn print style with tall, narrow proportions and a lively, uneven rhythm. Strokes are heavy with softly rounded terminals and subtle, natural-looking variation that suggests marker or brush pressure. Letterforms lean on simple geometry but stay intentionally irregular, with gently wobbly verticals, slightly asymmetric bowls, and open, readable counters. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, drawn-by-hand texture while remaining cohesive across upper- and lowercase and figures.
Well-suited for short, expressive text where a friendly handmade voice is desirable—posters, packaging, labels, social graphics, and small-brand identities. It can also work for headings, captions, or pull quotes in playful editorial contexts, especially when a casual, human touch is needed.
The overall tone is lighthearted and personable, with a quirky, storybook-like warmth. Its narrow, bouncy forms feel energetic and approachable rather than formal, adding a handmade charm that reads as fun and conversational.
The design appears intended to emulate confident hand lettering in a narrow footprint: bold enough to hold attention, irregular enough to feel personal, and consistent enough to typeset cheerful headlines and display copy without losing legibility.
Uppercase shapes are compact and monoline-ish in feel despite modest contrast, while lowercase introduces more personality through varied ascenders/descenders and rounded joins. Numerals follow the same soft, hand-rendered logic, with simplified shapes that prioritize charm and quick recognition over strict typographic regularity.