Print Hamut 12 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, social media, children’s, playful, friendly, casual, handmade, folksy, handmade feel, approachability, informal voice, quick lettering, signage mimicry, rounded, brushed, lively, bouncy, irregular.
A casual, hand-drawn print style with brush-like strokes and gently rounded terminals. The forms show natural, human variation in stroke thickness and letter width, with slightly uneven curves and occasional flared joins that suggest quick marker or paint-pen movement. Counters are open and generous (notably in O, P, and a), and many characters lean on simple, single-storey constructions with compact ascenders and descenders that keep the texture tight. Overall spacing is slightly irregular, reinforcing an organic rhythm rather than rigid typographic uniformity.
Best suited to short headlines, captions, and callouts where a friendly, informal tone is desired—such as packaging, café menus, event posters, classroom materials, and social media graphics. It can also work for branding elements that benefit from a hand-crafted feel, especially at medium to large sizes where the stroke nuance and playful rhythm remain clear.
The font reads warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, homemade energy. Its bouncy shapes and imperfect consistency feel conversational and crafty, evoking notes, signage, and playful editorial accents rather than formal text setting.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of hand-lettered print while staying readable and broadly usable, balancing expressive brush texture with straightforward letter shapes. The goal appears to be a personable, everyday voice that feels made by hand rather than mechanically constructed.
Several capitals have distinctive, idiosyncratic silhouettes (e.g., the rounded, open C and the looped, energetic Q), and the numerals share the same drawn-with-a-pen character, including soft curves and slight stroke modulation. The texture stays cohesive across upper- and lowercase, with a consistent brush pressure and rounded finishing that prevents the forms from feeling sharp or severe.