Print Vimet 5 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, labels, social graphics, playful, quirky, casual, friendly, hand-drawn, handwritten charm, space saving, casual readability, friendly branding, tall, condensed, rounded ends, slightly irregular, monoline.
A tall, condensed handwritten print with monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are simple and open, with gently uneven curves and slight stroke wobble that keeps the texture human rather than mechanical. Proportions are narrow and vertical, counters stay clear even at small sizes, and the overall rhythm is airy with generous internal space. Numerals follow the same slim, upright construction with modest baseline/height quirks typical of hand lettering.
Well suited to packaging and label-style typography where a hand-drawn touch helps signal friendliness and craft. It works nicely for posters, headings, short blurbs, and social graphics that benefit from a narrow footprint and a casual voice. It can also serve for UI accents or captions when a personable, handwritten note aesthetic is desired.
The tone is lighthearted and approachable, like neat marker or pen lettering used for labels and notes. Its narrow, upright stance feels tidy and organized, while the subtle irregularities add charm and informality. Overall it reads as friendly and slightly whimsical without becoming messy.
The design appears intended to capture neat, everyday hand printing in a streamlined, space-saving form. It prioritizes a clean, readable handwritten texture with subtle imperfections for warmth, aiming at informal display and branding contexts rather than formal editorial typography.
Capitals are especially tall and streamlined, giving words a vertical silhouette; round letters stay narrow and oval rather than circular. The lowercase maintains clear distinctions and avoids heavy joins, reinforcing a printed, unconnected feel. In longer text, the consistent thin stroke keeps the page from feeling dense, though the condensed width can make spacing feel tight in very small settings.