Print Irrag 4 is a bold, very wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, signage, children's, playful, casual, chunky, friendly, quirky, handmade feel, friendly display, casual branding, playful impact, rounded, blobby, bouncy, hand-drawn, informal.
A heavy, hand-drawn print with broad, rounded strokes and soft, slightly uneven contours. Forms lean on simple geometry—oval counters, open apertures, and flattened terminals—while retaining a loose, marker-like wobble that keeps edges organic rather than mechanical. Proportions feel expanded and horizontally roomy, with generous bowls and wide curves; spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the handmade rhythm. The lowercase is cleanly unconnected and legible, with a straightforward single-storey “a” and “g” and compact, rounded punctuation-like details such as the dot on “i/j.”
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, playful branding, packaging, event graphics, and informal signage. It also works well for children’s materials and friendly UI moments where personality is prioritized over long-form readability.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, reading as conversational and a bit goofy in a deliberate way. Its chunky presence and rounded shapes suggest warmth and humor, like quick lettering made for fun signage or kid-friendly messaging rather than formal text.
The design appears intended to mimic confident, thick marker lettering in an unconnected print style—prioritizing warmth, immediacy, and visual impact. Its wide, rounded construction and intentional irregularities aim to feel human and approachable while staying clear enough for display and short-copy use.
Distinctive, simplified numerals match the letterforms with broad strokes and rounded corners, and several characters show intentionally irregular joins and curve tension (notably in diagonals like V/W/X/Y). The texture stays consistent across the set, giving a cohesive hand-rendered feel even as individual glyph widths and inner shapes vary.