Print Nukim 5 is a light, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, invitations, children’s, craft branding, casual, friendly, handmade, playful, rustic, handmade feel, casual readability, human warmth, informal branding, wobbly, textured, imperfect, rounded, quirky.
A hand-drawn print face with slightly wobbly, irregular strokes and softly rounded terminals that mimic marker or brush-pen lettering. Letterforms are generally simple and open, with modestly inconsistent widths and subtle shape variation from glyph to glyph, creating an organic rhythm. Counters are roomy (notably in O, P, R, and a single-storey a), and curves show gentle flattening and small kinks that read as natural pen movement rather than geometric construction. Numerals follow the same informal logic, with a plain 1, a curled 2 and 3, and an open, slightly lopsided 4 that reinforces the handmade texture.
Well-suited for short-to-medium text where a friendly handmade voice is desirable, such as posters, labels, packaging, greeting cards, classroom materials, and casual brand touchpoints. It can add warmth to headlines, pull quotes, and product names, and works especially well when paired with clean supporting typography to balance its organic texture.
The overall tone is approachable and unpretentious, with a sketchbook authenticity that feels personal and conversational. Its unevenness reads as intentional and charming, lending a warm, human voice rather than a polished corporate one.
Designed to capture the immediacy of hand-printed lettering—legible, informal, and characterful—while maintaining enough consistency for coherent paragraph samples. The aim appears to be a versatile “handwritten but readable” texture for everyday, approachable communication.
Uppercase forms stay relatively restrained while still showing hand pressure and stroke wobble; lowercase adds more personality with taller ascenders, a compact single-storey g, and a simple i/j punctuation treatment. Spacing appears comfortable in running text, and the texture becomes a key visual feature at display sizes.