Print Pame 4 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, quotes, playful, casual, energetic, handmade, youthful, handmade feel, quick brush, display impact, casual emphasis, human warmth, brushy, textured, sketchy, bouncy, dynamic.
A lively, brush-drawn print with a pronounced rightward slant and a buoyant baseline rhythm. Strokes show high contrast with visible drag and dry-brush texture, creating slightly uneven edges and occasional ink build-up at turns. Letterforms are loosely constructed with open counters, rounded joins, and variable stroke endings that range from tapered flicks to blunt terminals. Overall spacing is moderately loose and the forms feel intentionally irregular, prioritizing gesture and speed over geometric precision.
Well-suited to short, attention-grabbing text such as posters, headlines, pull quotes, and social media graphics where an expressive handwritten feel is desired. It also works effectively on packaging or labels that benefit from a casual, artisanal tone, especially at display sizes where the brush texture reads clearly.
The tone is friendly and informal, with a spirited, hand-lettered presence that feels spontaneous and expressive. Its roughened brush texture adds warmth and a human touch, giving text an energetic, approachable voice rather than a polished, corporate one.
Designed to emulate quick brush lettering in an unconnected print style, combining an italic lean with textured strokes for an energetic, handmade look. The intent appears to be visual personality and immediacy—adding movement and warmth to display typography without the formality of a refined script.
Caps have a casual, marker-like authority while lowercase retains a quick handwritten flow; together they create a varied texture in mixed-case settings. Numerals are similarly expressive and slightly uneven in width, matching the brushy, drawn character of the letters. The texture and contrast become a key visual feature at larger sizes, where the bristle detail and stroke modulation are most apparent.