Print Islag 8 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Jawbreak' by BoxTube Labs, 'Blooms' by DearType, 'Grupi Sans' by Dikas Studio, and 'Farson Family' by Garisman Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, children’s media, stickers, playful, friendly, chunky, casual, quirky, approachability, impact, whimsy, handmade feel, rounded, bouncy, soft terminals, hand-drawn, irregular.
A very heavy, rounded display face with a hand-drawn feel and soft, blobby terminals. Strokes are uniformly thick with low contrast, and counters are small and slightly uneven, giving the letters a tactile, marker-like mass. The silhouette is gently irregular—curves wobble a bit, corners are softened, and widths vary from glyph to glyph—creating a bouncy rhythm across words. Lowercase forms are compact with simple, single-storey shapes, while the numerals share the same puffy, filled-in construction for a cohesive set.
Well-suited for playful headlines, packaging and labels, posters, event promos, children’s materials, and casual branding where a bold, friendly voice is needed. It also works nicely for short callouts (stickers, badges, social graphics) where the chunky shapes can serve as graphic elements as much as letterforms.
The font reads as warm and humorous, with an approachable “kids’ menu” friendliness and a slightly goofy charm. Its chunky black shapes feel energetic and informal, turning even neutral copy into something lighthearted and attention-seeking.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact with an informal, hand-drawn personality—combining dense, rounded letterforms with slight irregularities to feel human and fun rather than rigid or typographic.
Because the counters are tight and the weight is high, clarity can soften at small sizes or in dense settings; it performs best when given room to breathe with generous tracking and leading. The overall texture stays consistently bold and rounded across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, making it feel cohesive in headlines and short bursts of text.