Print Nadib 1 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, children's media, social graphics, quotes, playful, casual, friendly, hand-drawn, quirky, human warmth, informal voice, handmade feel, approachable signage, rounded, brushy, irregular, open counters, soft terminals.
A hand-drawn print style with gently irregular strokes and softly rounded terminals that mimic marker or brush-pen texture without visible dry-brush breakup. Letterforms lean on simple geometry—round bowls, open apertures, and compact proportions—while maintaining a lively, uneven rhythm from variable stroke pressure and subtle wobble. Uppercase shapes are straightforward and readable, and the lowercase keeps a modest, compact x-height with tall, simple ascenders and descenders. Overall spacing feels relaxed, with slightly inconsistent widths that reinforce the drawn-by-hand character rather than strict typographic regularity.
Well-suited for packaging, posters, and social or editorial graphics that benefit from a personable, hand-lettered voice. It also fits children’s materials, classroom resources, and casual signage where warmth and clarity are both important. Use it for headings, short blurbs, and pull quotes to highlight an informal, friendly message.
The font conveys an easygoing, approachable tone with a lightly whimsical edge. Its informal rhythm and rounded finishing give it a friendly, conversational feel suited to warm, human messaging rather than formal branding. The slightly quirky shapes add personality without becoming overly decorative or hard to read.
The design appears intended to replicate quick, confident hand printing in a clean, digitized form—capturing natural stroke variation and imperfect geometry while staying broadly legible. It prioritizes charm and approachability over strict consistency, aiming for an authentic, everyday handwritten look.
Counters tend to be generous and open, which supports legibility in short passages, while the numerals share the same casual, handwritten logic. The set reads best at display and larger text sizes, where the natural stroke variation and unevenness feel intentional and charming rather than fussy.