Print Halab 5 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s materials, posters, packaging, craft branding, social graphics, friendly, playful, casual, handmade, approachable, human warmth, casual legibility, playful tone, handmade feel, rounded, soft terminals, slightly irregular, loose rhythm, quirky.
A casual, hand-drawn print with mostly monoline strokes and gently rounded corners. The outlines show subtle irregularity and organic wobble, giving each character a made-by-hand feel while staying consistent enough for comfortable reading. Proportions are open and spacious, with generous counters and a slightly loose baseline rhythm. Terminals are generally soft and blunt rather than sharply cut, and curves (notably in O/C/S and the numerals) feel brush- or marker-like in their smoothness and minor variation.
Well suited to short-to-medium text where a warm, informal voice is desirable, such as children’s content, classroom materials, friendly posters, and casual packaging. It also works effectively for branding in handmade, craft, or small-batch contexts, and for social or display graphics that benefit from a personable, approachable look.
The font communicates an easygoing, friendly tone—informal without being messy. Its mild quirks and soft shapes add warmth and personality, making text feel conversational and human rather than corporate or rigid.
Likely designed to capture the feel of neat hand lettering in an unconnected print style—prioritizing approachability, clarity, and a lightly playful character. The consistent stroke weight and rounded construction suggest a goal of maintaining readability while preserving an organic, human texture.
Uppercase forms remain simple and legible, while lowercase letters add more personality through small asymmetries and varied stroke endings. Numerals are clear and rounded, matching the same casual, hand-rendered logic as the letters. Overall texture is even, with just enough variation to read as authentic handwriting rather than geometric construction.