Print Vakuh 15 is a light, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, greeting cards, kids content, social graphics, friendly, playful, casual, whimsical, approachable, human warmth, casual clarity, handmade feel, approachable display, monoline, rounded terminals, hand-drawn, bouncy baseline, open counters.
This font uses a hand-drawn print structure with simple, mostly monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms are compact and slightly irregular, with a lively rhythm created by uneven stroke starts/ends and small variations in width and spacing. Curves are generously rounded (notably in C, O, S), while verticals stay straight but subtly waver, reinforcing an organic marker/pen feel. Counters remain open and legible, and the overall texture is light and airy rather than dense.
It suits short-to-medium text where warmth and personality are desired, such as posters, packaging callouts, greeting cards, invitations, educational materials, and social media graphics. It can work for headings and display copy, and for small passages when set with ample size and spacing to preserve its airy, hand-drawn clarity.
The tone is friendly and informal, with a playful, conversational personality. Its gentle quirks and bouncy pacing feel human and approachable, suggesting everyday notes, classroom materials, or cheerful branding rather than formal editorial typography.
The design appears intended to mimic neat, informal hand printing with a controlled but natural irregularity, balancing charm with straightforward legibility. It aims to provide a personable display voice that feels crafted and approachable without relying on connected script forms.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent hand-lettered logic, with simplified forms and minimal ornamentation. Numerals match the same casual construction, keeping clear silhouettes and rounded joins. The text sample shows comfortable readability at larger sizes, while the natural irregularities become part of the charm and should be treated as a feature rather than a strictly uniform system.