Print Roboh 4 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, social media, playful, friendly, casual, energetic, retro, handmade feel, display impact, warmth, informality, motion, brushy, rounded, soft terminals, bouncy baseline, punchy.
A heavy, brush-driven italic with rounded forms and soft, tapering terminals. Strokes are broadly consistent and filled-in, producing chunky silhouettes with gentle swelling rather than sharp contrast. Letterforms lean forward with a lively, slightly bouncy rhythm, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, hand-drawn feel. Counters are compact but open enough to keep shapes clear at display sizes, while joins and curves stay smooth and blobby rather than crisp or geometric.
Best suited to display applications where bold, personable lettering is needed—posters, headlines, packaging callouts, café menus, stickers, and social media graphics. It can also work for logos or wordmarks that want a friendly handmade impression, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the brush shapes and rounded counters remain clear.
The font reads upbeat and approachable, like quick marker or paint lettering used for fun announcements. Its forward slant and bold mass create a sense of motion and enthusiasm, while the rounded edges keep the tone friendly rather than aggressive. Overall it suggests casual confidence with a slightly retro, sign-painter energy.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident brush or marker writing while maintaining consistent, reproducible shapes for branding and display typography. It prioritizes warmth, immediacy, and visual punch over formal refinement, aiming to feel hand-made without becoming hard to read.
Caps and lowercase share a consistent brush logic, with simplified details and a preference for rounded bowls and broad diagonals. Numerals match the same chunky, handwritten construction, making the set feel cohesive for mixed text. The heavy weight and tight internal spaces suggest it will be more at home in short phrases than in dense paragraphs.