Print Ugkun 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, headlines, social media, casual, friendly, modern, lively, handmade, hand-lettered feel, casual display, personal tone, modern script influence, brushy, calligraphic, upright-leaning, compact, expressive.
A casual handwritten print with brush-pen construction, combining tapered entry/exit strokes with thicker downstrokes and crisp, ink-like terminals. Letterforms are compact and tall with a slight rightward slant, and widths vary from glyph to glyph, giving the line a natural, handwritten rhythm. Curves are smooth and looped (notably in rounded letters), while straighter stems stay slightly elastic rather than geometric. Spacing feels airy in words despite the narrow proportions, and the numerals follow the same drawn, slightly irregular stroke behavior.
Best suited for short to medium display settings where a personable voice is desired, such as brand marks, packaging labels, posters, quotes, and social graphics. It can also work for invitations or menu headers where a hand-rendered accent is helpful, while very small sizes may reduce clarity due to the tapered strokes and narrow counters.
The overall tone is friendly and approachable, with an energetic, personal feel that reads as contemporary hand-lettering. Its bouncy contrast and subtle irregularities add warmth and informality without becoming messy or overly decorative.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering made with a flexible brush pen—balancing readability with expressive stroke variation. It aims to provide a casual, modern signature-like texture in a non-connecting print style for easy use in display typography.
Uppercase shapes are simplified and tall, while the lowercase introduces more distinctive handwritten cues such as looped descenders and soft joins within individual letters (without connecting between letters). The stroke contrast appears tool-driven rather than strictly structural, reinforcing a brush-script influence in a print-style alphabet.