Print Pubaw 11 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, children’s, comics, playful, whimsical, friendly, quirky, bold, handmade feel, bold impact, novelty tone, approachable display, rounded, brushy, organic, bouncy, chunky.
A chunky, rounded display face with a hand-drawn, brushy silhouette and noticeably irregular contours. Strokes feel swollen and soft-edged, with subtle tapering and occasional wedge-like terminals that suggest a quick marker or brush. Curves are generously inflated (notably in bowls and counters), while joins and corners remain slightly uneven, producing an organic rhythm. Letter widths vary and spacing feels lively rather than strictly uniform, reinforcing an informal, handcrafted texture across both upper- and lowercase as well as numerals.
Best suited to display settings where character is more important than neutrality: posters, headlines, event flyers, kids-oriented materials, playful packaging, and comic or cartoon branding. It also works well for short phrases, stickers, social graphics, and titles where a bold, hand-made look needs to read quickly from a distance.
The overall tone is cheerful and mischievous, with a cartoon-like buoyancy that reads as approachable and fun. Its confident black mass and animated shapes give it an energetic, kid-friendly personality that can also skew spooky-cute or novelty depending on color and context.
Likely designed to deliver an easygoing, hand-lettered feel with strong impact—combining heavy, rounded forms with deliberate irregularity to keep the texture lively. The aim appears to be a friendly novelty display style that stays cohesive across a full basic set while preserving the spontaneity of drawn lettering.
The uppercase set has a strong, poster-like presence, while the lowercase leans more casual and bouncy, creating a clear hierarchy when mixed. Counters tend to be small and asymmetric, which boosts personality at larger sizes but can reduce clarity in dense text. Numerals follow the same hand-cut, rounded logic and feel well-matched for headings and short callouts.