Print Puloy 5 is a very bold, very wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, logotypes, children’s media, playful, retro, whimsical, chunky, cheerful, expressiveness, nostalgia, display impact, handmade feel, approachability, rounded, soft serifs, blobby, bouncy, cartoonish.
A heavy, rounded display face with soft, bulb-like terminals and gently flared, serif-ish footings that read more as molded bumps than sharp wedges. Strokes are mostly monoline in feel but show subtle swelling and thinning that adds a hand-shaped, slightly irregular rhythm. Counters are compact and often pinched, with teardrop-like apertures in places, giving the letters an inflated, cutout silhouette. Proportions are generous and broad, with friendly curves and a low-detail, poster-oriented construction that stays consistent across caps, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, packaging callouts, event flyers, and branding marks where its chunky silhouettes can read as a graphic element. It also works well for playful editorial headings and children’s or entertainment-oriented applications, especially when set with ample spacing and at display sizes.
The overall tone is upbeat and nostalgic, evoking mid-century signage and playful cartoon titling. Its soft edges and bouncy shapes feel approachable and humorous rather than formal, with a handmade charm that keeps the texture lively in longer lines.
The font appears designed to deliver a bold, friendly display voice with a handcrafted, print-like feel—prioritizing character and nostalgia over neutrality. Its softened serifs, swollen strokes, and compact counters suggest an intention to mimic inked or cut-paper lettering commonly seen in vintage ads and whimsical signage.
The design leans on distinctive terminals and swelling joins, so letterforms maintain personality even at large sizes; in dense settings the tight counters and heavy joins can visually fill in. Numerals match the same rounded, blunted detailing, helping mixed alphanumeric layouts feel cohesive.