Print Rese 1 is a very bold, very wide, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, kids media, playful, bouncy, retro, friendly, quirky, attention, humor, warmth, nostalgia, handmade feel, rounded, soft terminals, swashy, bulbous, cartoony.
A chunky, rounded display face with a lively rightward slant and generous, soft curves throughout. Strokes are heavy and smooth with subtly modulated thickness, and many terminals flare into small teardrops or wedge-like feet that create a buoyant baseline rhythm. Counters are compact and often somewhat pinched, giving the letters a dense, inky presence, while the wide set and variable letter widths keep the texture animated rather than uniform. The overall silhouette reads as bold, blobby, and slightly swashy, with occasional spur-like details on curves and diagonals.
Best suited for display applications such as headlines, poster titles, packaging, and logo wordmarks where a bold, friendly personality is desired. It also fits playful branding, event graphics, and children-oriented or entertainment contexts, especially when used at larger sizes or in short bursts of text.
The font projects an upbeat, humorous tone with a vintage showcard feel—confident, attention-seeking, and a little mischievous. Its soft shapes and rhythmic bounce make it feel welcoming and informal, leaning more toward fun than seriousness.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum character and immediacy: a hand-drawn, print-style look with exaggerated weight, rounded forms, and decorative terminal flicks that keep the letterforms expressive. Its wide stance and slanted motion aim to feel energetic and informal, prioritizing personality and impact over neutral readability in body copy.
In longer text the heavy color and tight counters can reduce clarity, especially where forms crowd (notably in rounded letters and bowl joins). It performs best when given breathing room via larger sizes, looser tracking, and short line lengths so the playful terminals and slanted momentum remain readable.