Print Hulim 8 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, children’s, craft labels, playful, folksy, casual, handmade, quirky, handmade feel, friendly display, casual voice, textured impact, brushy, rounded, chunky, bouncy, uneven.
A bold, brush-drawn print style with rounded forms, tapered stroke endings, and visibly irregular contours that preserve a hand-rendered texture. Proportions lean broad with generous counters and a slightly bouncy baseline, while character widths vary enough to create an animated rhythm in words. Stems are generally sturdy and vertical, with occasional wobble and subtle swelling that reads like marker or brush pressure. Uppercase forms are simple and blocky, and the lowercase keeps open, friendly shapes with single-storey constructions where expected, maintaining clear separation between letters despite the organic edges.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where texture and charm are an asset—posters, packaging callouts, labels, invitations, and social graphics. It can also work for children’s materials or casual editorial sidebars, especially when set with ample tracking and generous line spacing to let the irregular rhythm read clearly.
The overall tone is warm and informal, suggesting a handmade note or playful signage rather than polished corporate typography. Its uneven edges and energetic rhythm give it a friendly, slightly mischievous character that feels approachable and craft-oriented.
Likely intended to capture the spontaneity of hand-lettered print in a repeatable typeface, balancing legibility with a deliberately imperfect, brushy finish. The goal appears to be an expressive, friendly display face that feels human and informal while staying readable in common headline sizes.
The design favors personality over strict consistency: terminals vary from blunt to softly tapered, and curves show minor flattening and wobble that enhance the drawn look. The numerals match the same chunky, brushed treatment and sit comfortably alongside the letters for mixed-text settings.