Print Jimal 8 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Grupi Sans' by Dikas Studio and 'Franklin Stone' by Ironbird Creative (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, headlines, stickers, playful, friendly, cartoonish, bubbly, casual, approachability, humor, informality, high impact, handmade feel, rounded, soft, chunky, inkblobby, hand-drawn.
A heavy, rounded print style with soft corners and bulbous terminals that feel like marker or brush fills. Strokes maintain a consistently thick presence with minimal contrast, while small irregularities in curves and joins add a hand-drawn rhythm. Counters are compact and often teardrop-like, and the overall silhouette favors puffy, simplified forms over crisp geometry. Spacing and widths vary slightly from letter to letter, reinforcing an informal, handmade texture while staying legible at display sizes.
Well-suited to playful display work such as children’s materials, casual branding, snack or novelty packaging, social graphics, stickers, and short headlines where a bold, friendly voice is needed. It can also work for title treatments in comics or lighthearted event promotions, especially when paired with a simpler text face for longer reading.
The font projects a warm, humorous tone—approachable and kid-friendly, with a comic, snackable energy. Its bouncy shapes and blobby ink feel suggest spontaneity and fun rather than formality or precision.
The design appears intended to deliver an energetic, hand-drawn print look with a thick, rounded footprint that stays readable and expressive. Its slightly irregular contours aim to feel human and spontaneous while maintaining consistent, high-impact shapes for attention-grabbing display use.
Many glyphs lean on simplified construction (single-storey-style forms and rounded apertures), and punctuation and numerals match the same soft, inflated aesthetic. The dense weight and tight counters can cause interior spaces to close up as sizes get smaller, so it reads best when given room.