Print Tato 6 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s titles, packaging, posters, stickers, greeting cards, playful, friendly, casual, bubbly, childlike, handmade feel, approachability, playfulness, informal display, rounded, blobby, chunky, soft terminals, uneven rhythm.
A chunky, rounded handwritten print with soft, blobby terminals and gently irregular stroke edges. The letterforms are mostly monoline in feel with subtle swelling at joins, and they lean on simple, open constructions that keep counters clear. Proportions are slightly inconsistent in a natural way—some glyphs run wider or narrower—and curves are emphasized over sharp corners, giving the alphabet a plush, approachable silhouette. Descenders and ascenders are short-to-moderate, and overall spacing feels roomy and forgiving rather than tightly engineered.
It works best for display uses where an informal, inviting voice is desired—kids’ materials, playful branding, product labels, craft packaging, and upbeat posters. It can also suit short UI headings or social graphics when a friendly handmade feel is needed, while longer body text may feel heavy due to the chunky strokes and lively irregularities.
The font reads as warm and personable, like marker lettering used for classroom labels or informal signage. Its rounded shapes and uneven rhythm add a lighthearted, handmade charm that feels approachable and upbeat. The tone is more whimsical than polished, prioritizing personality over strict uniformity.
The design appears intended to mimic casual hand-printed lettering with a rounded marker-like presence, balancing clear letter recognition with a deliberately imperfect, human rhythm. Its goal is to deliver an instantly friendly, playful tone that feels homemade and approachable in headlines and short statements.
Uppercase forms are broad and simplified, while the lowercase keeps single-storey shapes and friendly loops, helping maintain legibility in short phrases. Numerals are similarly rounded and sturdy, matching the soft-cornered, hand-drawn character. The texture stays consistent across the set, with no sharp calligraphic angle cues—more like a steady felt-tip or brush-pen impression.