Print Utgor 5 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, branding, invitations, playful, handmade, lively, whimsical, retro, expressiveness, handmade feel, display impact, friendly tone, vintage flavor, brushy, organic, bouncy, chiselled, calligraphic.
This font presents informal, hand-drawn letterforms with a consistent rightward slant and a brush-like, tapered stroke. Shapes are compact and generally narrow, with noticeable modulation where strokes thicken on curves and thin to sharp points at terminals. Curves are slightly irregular and lively, and many letters show wedge-like entry and exit strokes that create a carved, inked look rather than a geometric construction. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a natural handwritten rhythm while maintaining clear silhouettes in both uppercase and lowercase.
This font is well-suited for short-to-medium display text where a handcrafted voice is desirable, such as posters, product packaging, menus, invitations, and branding elements. It can also work for pull quotes or subheads when paired with a calmer text face, where its animated texture can provide emphasis without relying on additional decoration.
The overall tone is energetic and personable, with a slightly vintage, storybook feel. Its pointed terminals and swooping curves add drama and motion, making the text feel expressive and conversational rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to capture the spontaneity of quick brush lettering while staying readable and cohesive across the alphabet and numerals. Its tapered strokes, pointed terminals, and slightly irregular curves suggest a focus on personality and motion for display typography.
Uppercase forms read as display-oriented with strong, distinctive profiles, while the lowercase keeps a casual, note-like cadence. Numerals match the same brush-taper logic and maintain legibility, though the sharp terminals and varied widths make the texture more decorative than neutral in paragraph settings.