Print Fomoj 5 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, kids, social, headlines, playful, casual, friendly, handmade, quirky, handmade feel, casual tone, approachability, playfulness, informal display, rounded, brushy, bouncy, chunky, loose.
A lively, hand-drawn print style with rounded terminals, softly swollen strokes, and a slightly uneven baseline that creates a bouncy rhythm. Letterforms are compact with modest ascenders and relatively small lowercase bodies, while counters stay open and legible despite the brushy edges. Strokes show natural wobble and small variations in width and join angle, with simplified, marker-like construction and gentle curves rather than sharp geometry. Overall spacing feels informal and a bit irregular, reinforcing the handmade texture across both uppercase and lowercase as well as the numerals.
Works best for short-to-medium display copy where a friendly, handmade voice is desired—posters, packaging callouts, labels, social graphics, and editorial sidebars. It can also support playful educational or kid-oriented materials, especially for headings, captions, and highlighted phrases rather than dense body text.
The font conveys an upbeat, approachable tone—like quick handwriting done with a felt-tip marker. Its small quirks and unevenness read as personable and relaxed, adding charm and warmth rather than formality. The overall impression is energetic and slightly mischievous, well-suited to lighthearted communication.
Likely designed to emulate quick marker lettering with an intentionally imperfect, human cadence. The goal appears to be instant approachability and visual personality, providing a casual handwritten feel while remaining broadly readable in common display settings.
Uppercase forms lean toward simple, bold silhouettes that hold up well at display sizes, while lowercase characters keep a note-like economy of detail. The sample text shows consistent texture across longer passages, though the lively stroke edges and spacing give it a more handcrafted color than a neutral text face.