Print Melem 10 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, posters, packaging, invitations, social graphics, friendly, playful, casual, approachable, hand-drawn, human warmth, everyday note, kid-friendly, casual clarity, playful tone, rounded, soft terminals, monoline, bouncy baseline, open counters.
A casual hand-drawn print face with rounded forms, monoline strokes, and soft, slightly blunted terminals. Curves dominate the construction, with gently irregular stroke joins and a lively, uneven rhythm that keeps the texture organic without becoming messy. Proportions are compact and slightly variable from letter to letter, with open counters and straightforward, highly legible shapes; numerals follow the same informal, drawn-with-a-marker feel. Overall spacing reads roomy and relaxed, supporting easy word shapes in running text.
This font fits best where an informal, welcoming voice is needed: children’s materials, casual posters and flyers, friendly packaging, invitations and greeting cards, and social or classroom-style graphics. It also works well for headings, short paragraphs, labels, and callouts where warmth and clarity matter more than formal precision.
The tone is warm and personable, like neat classroom handwriting or a friendly note. Its bouncy rhythm and soft edges make it feel lighthearted and informal, suited to kid-friendly or community-oriented messaging without looking chaotic.
The design appears intended to emulate tidy, approachable handwritten printing with consistent monoline strokes and rounded shapes, balancing authenticity with readability. It aims for a cheerful, everyday personality that remains clear at typical display and text sizes.
Distinctive handwritten cues show up in the simplified, single-storey lowercase forms and the gentle inconsistencies in curve tension and stroke endings. Capitals are clean and readable, with rounded geometry that matches the lowercase, while the figures maintain an easy, hand-rendered charm that works well in short numeric callouts.