Print Ukdur 8 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, children’s books, greeting cards, playful, whimsical, friendly, handmade, storybook, handmade tone, expressive display, casual branding, warm personality, monoline feel, tapered strokes, rounded, loopy, bouncy.
A compact, handwritten print style with tall ascenders/descenders and a notably small x-height, giving the lowercase a lean, vertical rhythm. Strokes show pronounced modulation: many letters have thickened stems with hairline joins and tapered terminals, creating a brush-pen/drawn feel rather than rigid geometry. Counters are generally open and rounded, with softly irregular curves and occasional bulb-like ends, while spacing and widths vary per glyph to keep an organic, hand-set texture. Numerals and capitals follow the same lively contrast and tapering, reading clear but intentionally informal.
Best suited to display roles where personality is desired: headlines, short blurbs, packaging labels, invitations, greeting cards, and children’s or craft-themed materials. It can also work for light editorial pull quotes or UI accents, but its small x-height and lively stroke modulation are more effective at moderate-to-large sizes than in dense body text.
The font conveys a light, upbeat tone—casual and personable, with a slightly quirky, storybook charm. Its high-contrast, hand-drawn modulation adds a crafted, human presence that feels approachable and expressive rather than formal.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of neat hand printing with added flair from brush-like contrast and tapering, producing an energetic, friendly voice for expressive typography.
Distinctive tall forms (notably in letters like l, t, f, and y) and looping shapes add character in display settings, while the narrow proportions help it set tightly in short lines. The overall texture remains consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, with natural-looking variation that suggests marker or brush lettering.