Print Nybup 1 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, social media, invitations, casual, friendly, handmade, lively, organic, handmade feel, casual tone, personal voice, marker look, display impact, brushy, textured, expressive, irregular, rounded.
A casual handwritten print with a rightward slant and visibly brush-like, pressure-sensitive strokes. Letterforms show uneven stroke edges, slightly wobbly curves, and subtle width variation that reads as ink on paper rather than a rigid digital construction. Counters are generally open and rounded, terminals often taper, and proportions vary from glyph to glyph, creating an intentionally irregular rhythm. The lowercase has a notably short x-height relative to ascenders and capitals, while numerals follow the same loose, drawn character with simplified, single-stroke tendencies in places.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where a handmade voice is desirable—packaging, posters, event materials, social graphics, and casual branding accents. It can work for brief paragraphs at larger sizes, but the irregular rhythm and textured strokes are most effective when readability demands are moderate and personality is the priority.
The overall tone is approachable and human, with a quick, spontaneous energy that feels informal and personal. Its unevenness and textured stroke quality convey warmth and authenticity, like a note written with a marker or brush pen.
Designed to mimic quick, natural hand lettering with brushy texture and an easygoing slant, prioritizing character and spontaneity over strict geometric consistency. The short lowercase proportions and lively stroke modulation aim to keep text feeling energetic and personal in real-world design applications.
Spacing and alignment feel loosely standardized, supporting the hand-rendered illusion; some characters lean and breathe differently, which adds charm but reduces typographic uniformity. The set maintains consistent stroke personality across caps, lowercase, and figures, keeping the voice coherent even as individual glyphs vary in shape.