Print Ullup 8 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, social graphics, children's media, friendly, playful, casual, hand-drawn, approachable, handmade feel, friendly tone, compact lettering, everyday notes, monolinear, rounded, loopy, soft, organic.
A condensed, hand-drawn print style with smooth, rounded terminals and a slightly irregular stroke rhythm that preserves a natural marker/pen feel. Strokes are generally monolinear with subtle pressure variation, and curves are generous—especially in bowls and loops—giving the glyphs a soft, buoyant silhouette. Proportions are tall and narrow with consistent upright posture; counters stay open and legible, while occasional asymmetries and small baseline/width variations add human warmth without becoming messy.
Well-suited to short-to-medium text where an informal, human voice is desirable: packaging callouts, posters, menu boards, classroom materials, social media graphics, and cheerful branding accents. It also works nicely for headings and pull quotes when you want a compact handwritten look with clear letterforms.
The overall tone is lighthearted and personable, like neat handwriting used for labels or casual notes. It reads as friendly and upbeat rather than formal, with a youthful, handmade charm that keeps text from feeling corporate or rigid.
The design appears intended to deliver an easygoing handwritten print aesthetic that stays readable while retaining the imperfections and charm of real pen strokes. Its condensed build suggests a focus on fitting more characters into tight spaces—useful for labels and headlines—without sacrificing an inviting, friendly tone.
Distinctive looped forms appear in several letters (notably round characters like O/Q and lowercases such as g/y), and the numerals match the same narrow, rounded construction for a cohesive set. In longer lines, the tight width and lively curves create an energetic texture, so generous line spacing helps the forms breathe.