Print Akmaf 12 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, greetings, posters, social media, friendly, playful, casual, approachable, handmade, handmade feel, approachability, informal clarity, playful tone, monoline, rounded, loopy, bouncy, informal.
A casual monoline handwritten print with rounded terminals and gently wobbly stroke edges that preserve a drawn-by-hand feel. Letterforms are narrow and upright, with modest ascenders and a comparatively small x-height that gives mixed-case text a light, airy rhythm. Curves are soft and open (notably in C, O, and S), while several capitals use simplified, slightly quirky constructions (such as the looped Q and the angular, spiky A/M/W shapes). Spacing appears uneven in an intentional way, and character widths vary just enough to keep lines lively without becoming chaotic.
Well suited to short-to-medium text in friendly contexts such as packaging, café menus, greeting cards, children’s materials, and casual branding. It also works nicely for headlines, pull quotes, and social graphics where a hand-lettered voice is desired and a bit of natural irregularity adds warmth.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like neat marker lettering in a notebook or on a handmade sign. Its slight irregularities and rounded shapes make it feel relaxed and human, with a playful, everyday charm rather than a polished corporate voice.
Designed to mimic neat, quick hand printing with a consistent monoline stroke and rounded forms, prioritizing approachability and charm over typographic strictness. The slightly quirky capitals and lively proportions suggest an aim for recognizability and personality in display applications while remaining readable in mixed-case text.
Distinctive details include looped descenders (g, y), a single-storey a, a simple upright i with a round dot, and numerals that follow the same hand-drawn logic (open, rounded forms with occasional asymmetry). The font maintains consistent stroke weight across curves and straights, helping it stay clear at display sizes while retaining its informal character.