Print Biguw 13 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s, greeting cards, packaging, posters, crafting, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, human touch, everyday note, friendly tone, easy readability, rounded, monoline, loose, open, bouncy.
A rounded, monoline handwritten print with gently uneven curves and subtly varied character widths that create a natural, hand-drawn rhythm. Strokes are smooth and mostly uniform, with soft terminals and occasional slight wobble that keeps the texture lively rather than mechanical. Counters are generally open and circular (notably in O, o, e, and 0), while ascenders and descenders are simple and uncluttered; overall spacing reads airy and forgiving. Capitals are straightforward and legible with simplified construction, and figures follow the same informal, drawn-with-a-pen feel.
This font fits best where a friendly, informal voice is needed: kids-oriented materials, greeting cards, labels and packaging, posters, and social graphics. It can also work for headings or short body copy in lighthearted editorial or educational contexts where a clean handwritten texture is preferred over a connected script.
The overall tone is warm and informal, evoking casual notes, classroom handouts, or friendly packaging copy. Its rounded shapes and relaxed consistency feel inviting and non-intimidating, leaning more playful than serious while staying readable in short passages.
The likely intention is to provide a legible handwritten print that retains the charm of real pen lettering while staying consistent enough for repeated use in design layouts. It emphasizes approachable simplicity—rounded forms, open counters, and a relaxed rhythm—over precision or formality.
The design shows a deliberate balance between consistency and natural variation: repeated forms keep a cohesive voice, while small irregularities in curves and joins prevent it from feeling rigid. The lowercase includes simple, single-storey constructions, reinforcing the everyday handwritten impression.