Print Kaguh 16 is a bold, narrow, monoline, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s media, packaging, posters, greeting cards, classroom materials, playful, friendly, casual, handmade, kidlike, hand-drawn warmth, casual clarity, playful voice, headline impact, rounded, bouncy, soft, chunky, quirky.
A chunky, rounded handwritten print with steady stroke weight and softly blunted terminals. Letters are mostly upright with gently irregular curves and a slightly bouncy baseline that keeps the texture informal while remaining consistent. Counters tend to be open and generous, and many forms simplify into single-stroke, marker-like constructions; joins and intersections (like in M, N, and W) feel drawn rather than engineered. Overall proportions are compact with fairly narrow set widths and lively, uneven rhythm that reads as intentionally hand-rendered.
Well suited to children’s materials, playful packaging, casual posters, and greeting-card style headlines where an informal handwritten voice is desirable. It can also work for short UI labels, stickers, and social graphics when a friendly, approachable tone is needed, especially at medium to large sizes.
The font conveys an approachable, cheerful tone with a homemade, doodled personality. Its soft edges and friendly proportions create a warm, low-pressure feel that suits lighthearted messaging more than formal or technical content.
Likely designed to emulate a thick felt-tip or marker hand-print, prioritizing warmth and personality over strict geometric regularity. The consistent stroke and rounded terminals suggest an aim for bold, easy-to-spot lettering with a relaxed, human rhythm.
Distinctive, slightly idiosyncratic shapes (notably in curves like S and G, and the loopier lowercase forms) add character and help it look authentically drawn. Numerals match the same rounded, marker-like treatment and maintain similar weight and softness for cohesive mixed text.