Print Wunal 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, social media, invitations, casual, expressive, handcrafted, friendly, energetic, handwritten tone, natural texture, quick lettering, casual display, personal voice, brushy, sketchy, bouncy, loopy, slanted.
A lively handwritten print with a pronounced rightward slant and brisk, brush-like strokes. Letterforms are narrow and tall, with compact counters and quick curves, giving the text a tight, vertical rhythm. Strokes show noticeable modulation and slight wobble, creating a natural, drawn-by-hand texture rather than geometric precision. Terminals tend to taper and flick, with occasional looped or hooked entries/exits and mildly irregular spacing that keeps the line feeling organic.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where a casual, handwritten voice is desired: headlines, posters, packaging callouts, social posts, and invitation-style materials. It can also work for quotes or short paragraphs when set with generous line spacing, letting the narrow, slanted forms breathe and keeping the handwritten texture from feeling crowded.
The overall tone feels informal and personal, like fast marker or brush-pen lettering used for notes, labels, and casual headlines. Its slant and flicked terminals add momentum and a sense of spontaneity, while the consistent narrowness keeps it from becoming overly playful or decorative. The result is confident and energetic, with a warm, human presence.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick hand lettering—narrow, slanted, and brushy—while staying legible enough for everyday display use. It prioritizes personality and motion over typographic neutrality, aiming for a natural written feel that still maintains a cohesive rhythm across the alphabet and numerals.
Uppercase forms read as simplified, handwritten caps rather than formal calligraphic capitals, while the lowercase mixes open shapes with occasional loops (notably in letters like g, j, and y). Numerals follow the same quick, handwritten logic, with slender forms and light quirks that match the alphabet. Texture becomes more apparent at larger sizes where the stroke variation and subtle roughness read as intentional character.