Print Akbon 8 is a light, narrow, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, social media, greeting cards, posters, casual, friendly, playful, approachable, handmade, handwritten feel, informality, approachability, legibility, charm, monoline, rounded, bouncy, quirky, upright-leaning.
A casual handwritten print with monoline strokes, rounded terminals, and subtly uneven curves that preserve a drawn-by-hand feel. Letters are generally slim and vertically oriented with a gentle rightward lean, while stroke edges stay smooth rather than dry or textured. Proportions are slightly irregular—bowls and counters vary a bit from glyph to glyph—creating a lively rhythm without sacrificing overall clarity. Ascenders and descenders are moderately long, and the numerals follow the same simple, open forms for consistent color in mixed text.
Works well for branding accents, packaging copy, and social posts where an informal, human voice is desired. It also fits greeting cards, invitations, and poster headlines, and can handle short-to-medium text blocks when you want a relaxed handwritten texture without heavy stylization.
The tone is friendly and informal, like quick neat marker lettering. Its small quirks and buoyant spacing make it feel personable and conversational rather than formal or technical. Overall, it reads as lighthearted and everyday, suitable for messages meant to feel human and approachable.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, neat hand printing—prioritizing friendliness and immediacy while keeping letterforms simple and legible. Its consistent monoline construction and restrained quirks suggest a balance between everyday usability and an intentionally handmade personality.
Capitals are straightforward and readable, with softly simplified geometry (e.g., open curves and minimal stroke modulation). Lowercase forms keep a printed structure (unconnected) and lean on open apertures for legibility, while a few characters show distinctive hand-drawn idiosyncrasies that add charm in display sizes.