Print Model 2 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, greeting cards, posters, social graphics, playful, friendly, casual, youthful, handmade, handmade warmth, approachable clarity, casual voice, playful branding, rounded, monoline, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, open counters.
A rounded, monoline handwritten print with softly curved strokes and gently irregular construction. Letterforms show subtle wobble in verticals and horizontals, rounded terminals, and occasional stroke taper from natural pen pressure. Proportions are on the broad side with generous interior space, and spacing feels airy and informal rather than mechanically even. Uppercase is simple and open, while lowercase keeps a clean, readable rhythm with single-storey forms and minimal joins.
Well suited to short-to-medium text where a friendly, informal voice is desired—such as children’s materials, greeting cards, playful packaging, classroom or craft projects, and casual posters or social media graphics. It also works effectively for headings and callouts where a human touch is more important than strict typographic precision.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, doodled character that reads as personal and unpretentious. Its slightly uneven rhythm and soft shapes give it a kid-friendly, conversational feel without becoming messy or frantic.
The font appears designed to emulate neat, everyday hand-printed lettering with a consistent stroke and rounded forms, prioritizing approachability and readability over geometric uniformity. Its mild irregularities and open shapes suggest an intention to feel handcrafted while remaining dependable in common display and UI-like sizes.
Numbers and capitals keep the same hand-drawn logic as the lowercase, with simplified shapes and rounded corners that maintain consistency across the set. The design favors clarity through open counters and straightforward construction, making it feel more like neat marker printing than cursive handwriting.