Print Ufnal 8 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, social media, headlines, invitations, casual, energetic, friendly, handmade, playful, handwritten feel, brush texture, casual display, personal tone, brushy, slanted, bouncy, organic, expressive.
A lively brush-style print with a pronounced rightward slant and high-contrast strokes that shift from hairline entries to fuller downstrokes. The letterforms are unconnected and built from quick, tapered strokes with rounded terminals, occasional flicks, and a slightly uneven baseline rhythm that reinforces the hand-drawn feel. Proportions are compact and upright in their internal structure but consistently italicized, with modest ascenders/descenders and a relatively small x-height that keeps lowercase forms airy at text sizes. Counters tend toward narrow, and stroke joins show natural, calligraphic compression rather than geometric regularity.
This font suits short display settings where an approachable, hand-lettered voice is desired—such as packaging labels, café menus, posters, social posts, and invitation headlines. It performs best when given generous size and spacing so the contrast and tapered details remain crisp.
The overall tone is informal and upbeat, like fast marker or brush-pen lettering used for personal notes and friendly signage. Its springy rhythm and tapered starts/stops convey spontaneity and warmth while still reading clearly in short phrases.
The design appears intended to capture quick brush-pen handwriting in a clean, repeatable print alphabet. It emphasizes expressive stroke contrast and a natural, slightly irregular rhythm to feel personal and contemporary without relying on connected script forms.
Uppercase characters lean toward simplified, single-stroke construction, while lowercase forms show more brush modulation and looped details (notably in letters like g, j, y, and z). Numerals follow the same brisk, handwritten logic with open curves and tapered hooks, matching the texture of the alphabet.