Print Dager 1 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, posters, headlines, classroom materials, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, youthful, handmade feel, approachability, informal display, legibility, rounded, bouncy, hand-drawn, soft terminals, monoline-ish.
A rounded, hand-drawn print style with gently irregular stroke flow and soft, blunted terminals. Forms lean toward simple geometric skeletons (circular O/o, open C/c) but with human wobble in curves and joins that keeps the rhythm lively. Caps are compact and slightly boxy in places, while lowercase shows a more varied, bouncy construction; ascenders are tall and slim, and bowls and counters stay fairly open for readability. Numerals and punctuation match the same informal, marker-like texture, with single-storey lowercase a and g contributing to the casual tone.
Well suited to short-to-medium text where a friendly handmade voice is desired: children’s titles, classroom handouts, craft or boutique packaging, casual posters, and social graphics. It also works for headings in apps or websites when you want an informal, welcoming tone without cursive connections.
The overall tone is approachable and lighthearted, like neat handwriting made for labels, notes, and kid-friendly messaging. Its imperfect symmetry and rounded ends read as warm and non-authoritative, giving text a conversational, handmade feel without becoming messy.
The design appears intended to mimic clean, playful hand printing with consistent legibility and a deliberately imperfect, human rhythm. It balances simple, rounded structures with small quirks in stroke and proportion to feel personable and informal in display and headline contexts.
Stroke width stays fairly consistent across the set, with visible micro-variation that suggests a felt-tip or marker draw rather than a rigid pen. Spacing and widths fluctuate slightly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the handmade character while keeping word shapes recognizable in longer lines.