Print Momus 5 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, children’s media, comics, playful, casual, quirky, friendly, cartoonish, hand-lettered look, friendly display, informal voice, graphic impact, rounded, blobby, brushy, chunky, irregular.
A chunky, hand-drawn print with rounded, blobby forms and softly flared stroke endings that mimic a brush or marker. Strokes show gentle, organic modulation and slightly wavy contours, creating a lively rhythm rather than mechanical consistency. Proportions are broad with generous bowls and open counters, while spacing and letter widths vary enough to keep the texture informal and handmade. The overall silhouette reads clearly at display sizes, with occasional quirky terminals and simplified interior shapes that emphasize mass and momentum.
Well-suited for posters, headlines, and short bursts of copy where a friendly handmade voice is needed. It can work effectively on packaging, social graphics, and event promos, as well as children’s materials and comic-style titling, where its chunky shapes remain legible and charismatic at larger sizes.
The tone is lighthearted and conversational, suggesting doodled notes, kids’ media, and informal signage. Its wide, bouncy shapes feel approachable and humorous, with a deliberately imperfect finish that adds personality and warmth. The texture leans expressive rather than refined, giving text a hand-crafted, spontaneous energy.
The design appears intended to simulate bold hand lettering—casual, quick, and slightly exaggerated—while maintaining enough consistency to function as a readable display font. Its wide, rounded construction prioritizes personality and visual impact, aiming for an approachable, fun presence in attention-grabbing contexts.
The uppercase and lowercase share a cohesive, brushy construction, and the numerals follow the same rounded, weighty logic for a unified set. The ink-like edges and soft tapering at joins create a strong, graphic color on the page, making it most comfortable where character and immediacy are desired over typographic neutrality.