Print Harab 8 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, children’s, social media, headlines, playful, casual, handmade, quirky, youthful, informality, friendliness, handmade feel, approachability, expressiveness, rounded, brushy, organic, lively, irregular.
This font has an informal hand-drawn print structure with rounded forms and lightly brush-like terminals. Strokes show subtle, natural wobble and occasional tapering, creating a lively rhythm without strong thick–thin modulation. Curves are generous and slightly asymmetric, while many straight strokes lean toward soft, organic edges rather than rigid geometry. Spacing and letter widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a spontaneous, handwritten texture across both uppercase and lowercase, with simple, open numerals that match the same drawn-on feel.
It works well for short to medium passages where a friendly, handmade impression is desired—such as posters, product labels, café menus, social graphics, and children-oriented materials. It’s particularly effective for headlines, pull quotes, and playful branding where character and warmth matter more than strict uniformity.
The overall tone is friendly and approachable, with a casual, slightly whimsical character that feels personal rather than polished. Its unevenness reads as intentional and human, lending an expressive, conversational voice suited to lighthearted messaging.
The design intent appears to be a casual hand-printed face that captures the spontaneity of marker or brush lettering while staying legible in continuous text. Its varied widths, rounded construction, and lightly tapered endings suggest it is meant to feel human, relaxed, and expressive.
Uppercase shapes tend to be simplified and bold in silhouette, while the lowercase stays compact and bouncy, producing noticeable texture in running text. The sample shows good readability at display-to-text sizes, though the irregular widths and handcrafted contours make it feel most at home in relaxed settings rather than formal typography.