Print Buder 6 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, invitations, social graphics, friendly, playful, casual, approachable, hand-drawn, human warmth, everyday note, casual clarity, playful tone, handmade texture, rounded, monoline, soft terminals, loose rhythm, informal.
A casual hand-drawn print with monoline strokes and softly rounded terminals. Forms are slightly irregular with a loose, organic rhythm, showing small variations in curve tension and stroke endings that feel marker- or pen-like. Counters tend toward open, rounded shapes, and proportions vary from glyph to glyph, giving the alphabet an easy, unforced texture. Overall spacing is relaxed and the silhouettes stay clear at text sizes despite the intentionally uneven hand-made edges.
Works well for kid-friendly branding, casual packaging, greeting cards, invitations, and posters where a personable handwritten feel is desired. It also suits social media graphics, short editorial callouts, and educational materials, especially in headlines and short paragraphs where its relaxed rhythm adds warmth without sacrificing basic legibility.
The tone is warm and approachable, with a lightly playful character that reads as personal and conversational rather than formal. Its gentle roundness and imperfect stroke behavior evoke a friendly note-taking or classroom feel, keeping the mood upbeat without becoming overly decorative.
Designed to mimic natural, everyday handwriting in a clean print style—prioritizing friendliness and readability over precision. The letterforms aim for an authentic hand-drawn texture with consistent stroke weight and rounded shapes, making it suitable for informal communication and approachable display typography.
Capital letters have simple, legible constructions and avoid sharp geometry, while lowercase maintains a printed (unjoined) flow with a consistent, informal cadence. Numerals match the same rounded, hand-rendered logic, supporting cohesive mixed text. The font’s charm comes from controlled inconsistency—subtle wobble, varied widths, and soft stroke endings—rather than strong contrast or rigid alignment.