Print Pukum 4 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Arial' by Monotype and 'Generic' by More Etc (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, kids, stickers, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, chunky, informality, approachability, handmade feel, display impact, rounded, blobby, hand-drawn, irregular, soft.
A chunky, hand-drawn print style with rounded, blobby forms and noticeably uneven stroke edges, as if made with a soft marker. Counters are compact and sometimes asymmetrical, and terminals tend to bulge rather than end crisply. The overall rhythm is lively and slightly irregular, with variable widths across letters and simplified, sturdy shapes that stay highly legible at display sizes.
Best suited to short, bold text where character is the priority: posters, headlines, playful packaging, kids-oriented materials, stickers, and casual social graphics. It can also work for brief UI callouts or labels when a friendly, hand-made impression is desired, but the dense, chunky shapes may feel heavy for long paragraphs at small sizes.
The tone is cheerful and approachable, with an informal, slightly goofy personality. Its imperfect contours and bouncy proportions read as human and relaxed, giving text a friendly, homemade feel rather than a polished, corporate voice.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of hand lettering while keeping a solid, readable silhouette. By combining soft, rounded construction with intentionally uneven edges, it aims for a warm, personable look that feels drawn rather than engineered.
Capitals and lowercase share a consistent, thick silhouette, with lowercase forms that lean toward single-storey simplicity (notably in a and g). Numerals match the same soft, weighty texture, and punctuation in the sample text sits comfortably within the heavy, rounded system.