Print Wurug 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, greeting cards, playful, casual, handmade, friendly, whimsical, handmade feel, casual display, brush lettering, friendly tone, brushy, textured, bouncy, organic, quirky.
A lively handwritten print with brush-pen construction and visibly textured fills. Strokes swing between hairline joins and heavier downstrokes, creating an energetic rhythm and a slightly uneven, handcrafted color. Letterforms are compact and mostly upright with rounded terminals, occasional tapered flicks, and a mix of narrow and more open shapes that keeps word images animated. Capitals feel tall and expressive, while the lowercase has a small body with prominent ascenders and descenders, and generally open counters that help maintain readability in short lines.
Best suited to short, display-driven settings where its brush texture and animated rhythm can be appreciated—such as posters, packaging callouts, social graphics, greeting cards, invitations, and casual branding accents. It can work for brief subheads or pull quotes, but the textured high-contrast strokes make it more comfortable at medium-to-large sizes than in dense body text.
The overall tone is cheerful and informal, like quick signage or a personal note made with a brush marker. Its bouncy proportions and inky texture add warmth and spontaneity, giving headlines a conversational, handcrafted feel.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering while keeping characters unconnected for straightforward typesetting. It aims to deliver an approachable, handcrafted look with enough consistency to read cleanly in punchy titles and informal messaging.
Texture appears baked into the outlines rather than added as an effect, so the black areas read slightly speckled and painterly at larger sizes. Several forms show distinctive looped or hooked entries and exits (notably in letters like g, y, and j), reinforcing the drawn-by-hand character and making the font feel more illustrative than neutral.