Print Daket 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, children’s media, social graphics, headlines, playful, handmade, casual, quirky, friendly, handwritten warmth, informal display, expressive texture, youthful tone, casual signage, monoline feel, spiky terminals, rounded forms, irregular rhythm, loose spacing.
A hand-drawn print face with a narrow overall build, lively irregular rhythm, and a mix of rounded bowls and sharper, tapering terminals. Strokes feel marker-like with noticeable contrast between thicker and thinner segments, and edges that look slightly wobbly rather than mechanically smooth. Letterforms are mostly upright with simple structures, open counters, and occasional exaggerated joins and points (notably in diagonals and arms), giving the set an intentionally imperfect, sketched consistency. Numerals follow the same casual construction, with compact proportions and varying stroke emphasis from glyph to glyph.
Well-suited for short to medium-length display text where a handmade voice is desired—posters, packaging callouts, labels, invitations, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It can also work for brief UI accents or captions when you want an informal tone, though the busy stroke variation suggests avoiding very small sizes for long reading.
The font reads as playful and personable, like quick hand lettering used for notes or informal signage. Its uneven stroke energy and slightly spiky finishes add a mischievous, whimsical tone while staying approachable and legible at display sizes.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand printing with a deliberately imperfect finish—combining narrow proportions and energetic stroke contrast to create a memorable, casual display texture.
Capitals and lowercase share a similar visual weight and straightforward skeletons, helping mixed-case text feel cohesive. The narrow proportions and variable widths create a distinctive, slightly bouncy texture in words, especially where tall ascenders and pointed joins introduce extra vertical emphasis.