Print Akmap 5 is a light, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: greeting cards, packaging, social posts, quotes, children’s materials, friendly, casual, approachable, playful, personal, handwritten feel, approachability, everyday clarity, friendly tone, informal branding, rounded, loopy, flowing, monoline, brushy.
A casual handwritten print with a smooth, monoline stroke and a consistent rightward slant. Letterforms are rounded and open, with softly tapered terminals and occasional looped joins inside characters (notably in bowls and descenders). Proportions feel slightly bouncy, with variable character widths and gentle baseline liveliness that keeps lines readable while preserving an organic, drawn rhythm. Counters are generous and curves dominate, giving the set a soft, fluid texture in both capitals and lowercase, with similarly informal numerals.
Well-suited to applications that benefit from an informal, human touch—greeting cards, casual branding, light packaging, social graphics, and short quote or headline treatments. It can also work for friendly educational or kids-oriented materials where warmth and legibility are both important.
The overall tone is warm and personable, like quick but careful marker or brush lettering. It reads as relaxed and conversational, with a lighthearted, everyday charm rather than formality or precision. The slanted, flowing movement adds energy and friendliness without becoming overly exuberant.
The design appears intended to capture the look of natural hand lettering in a clean, reproducible form—prioritizing approachability, smooth rhythm, and straightforward readability over strict typographic regularity. The consistent slant and rounded construction suggest a deliberate effort to feel lively and personal while remaining usable across common display and short-text contexts.
Capitals stay simple and legible while retaining handwritten quirks, and the lowercase shows the strongest personality through looped forms and long, sweeping ascenders/descenders. Spacing appears even enough for short text blocks, and the rounded punctuation-like dots (e.g., on i/j) reinforce the soft, informal feel.