Print Kiduf 10 is a regular weight, normal width, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, posters, headlines, classroom materials, playful, friendly, casual, kidlike, approachable, handmade warmth, casual clarity, cheerful tone, human touch, rounded, soft, bouncy, quirky, chunky.
This font has a hand-drawn, monoline look with rounded terminals and softly swollen curves that keep strokes feeling even but organic. Letterforms are simplified and slightly irregular, with gentle wobble in verticals and horizontals and open, roomy counters. Proportions lean wide and airy, with a modest x-height and ample spacing that helps the shapes stay clear despite their informal construction. Numerals match the same rounded, marker-like rhythm, with smooth bends and minimal sharp corners.
It works best for short-to-medium text where a warm, informal feel is desired—such as children’s materials, playful branding, labels, casual packaging, and upbeat posters. It can also support friendly UI moments (badges, onboarding, prompts) when used at larger sizes where its hand-drawn texture remains crisp.
The overall tone is upbeat and personable, like neat handwriting made with a felt-tip pen. Its unevenness reads as intentional and charming, giving text a conversational, lighthearted voice. The rounded forms and soft corners keep it friendly rather than rough or edgy.
The font appears designed to mimic tidy, friendly print handwriting with consistent stroke weight and rounded geometry. Its goal seems to be legibility with personality—keeping forms simple and open while preserving the spontaneity of drawn letters for approachable, everyday communication.
The design maintains consistent stroke presence across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, while allowing visible variation in curve tension and join placement that reinforces the handmade character. Uppercase forms remain simple and open, and lowercase shapes favor single-storey, uncomplicated constructions that support quick recognition at display sizes.