Print Dimih 5 is a very light, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: cards, packaging, posters, headlines, kids media, friendly, airy, casual, playful, approachable, handwritten warmth, casual readability, light charm, modern simplicity, monoline, rounded, loopy, open counters, hand-drawn.
A monoline, hand-drawn print face with slender strokes and softly rounded terminals. Letterforms lean on simple geometry—oval bowls, open apertures, and gentle curves—while retaining small human irregularities in curve tension and joins. Proportions are generally tall with modest x-height, and spacing feels loose and breathable, giving words a light, sketchlike texture. Numerals and capitals keep the same pared-back construction, with occasional looped details (notably in forms like g and y) that add character without becoming fully cursive.
This font works well for short to medium-length text where a handwritten, friendly voice is desired—greeting cards, labels, light packaging, social graphics, and posters. It can also suit children’s materials, café/retail signage, and editorial pull quotes, especially at larger sizes where its delicate strokes and open shapes remain clear.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like neat handwriting with a calm, friendly cadence. Its light rhythm and rounded shapes make it feel approachable and slightly whimsical, suitable for content that should read as human and unpretentious rather than formal or technical.
The design appears intended to provide a clean, readable handwritten print style that feels personal and modern. It aims for simplicity and warmth—keeping forms straightforward and consistent—while sprinkling in subtle hand-drawn quirks to avoid a sterile, geometric feel.
Stroke endings stay consistently blunt-to-rounded, and curves dominate over sharp corners, which helps maintain a gentle, cohesive color on the page. Distinctive handwritten quirks appear in a few glyphs (such as looped descenders and simplified crossbars), contributing to charm while keeping the alphabet broadly legible.