Print Warur 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, titles, stickers, quirky, playful, spooky, retro, handmade, expressiveness, handmade feel, display impact, vintage flavor, condensed, textured, wobbly, whimsical, tall.
A tall, tightly condensed hand-drawn print with pronounced thick–thin modulation and slightly irregular outlines. Strokes alternate between narrow hairlines and heavier verticals, with occasional ink-like texture and small voids that give a distressed, stamped feel. Curves are narrow and upright, counters tend to be tight, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, creating a lively, uneven rhythm. Overall spacing reads compact, favoring verticality and a slightly jittery baseline/curve behavior rather than strict geometric consistency.
Best suited to display settings where personality matters: posters, event flyers, title treatments, packaging, and short promotional lines. It can also work for playful branding accents or label-style graphics, but the condensed proportions and textured contrast make it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The font conveys a quirky, theatrical tone—part vintage sign lettering, part storybook display, with a hint of eerie charm from the roughened ink texture. Its tall silhouettes and uneven rhythm feel handmade and characterful, leaning more expressive than polite or neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver a narrow, attention-grabbing handwritten print look with high-contrast stroke play and a lightly distressed finish. Its variable glyph widths and imperfect edges prioritize charm and expressiveness over strict uniformity.
Uppercase forms are especially slender and poster-like, while lowercase and numerals keep the same condensed stance with occasional exaggerated loops and tapered terminals. The internal texture is subtle but persistent enough to read as intentional, adding grit without turning fully grunge.