Print Keruk 8 is a regular weight, wide, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, posters, packaging, social graphics, craft labels, playful, friendly, whimsical, casual, youthful, hand-drawn warmth, approachable voice, playful display, casual readability, rounded, bubbly, marker-like, soft terminals, irregular.
A rounded, hand-drawn print style with softly swelling strokes and gently uneven contours that mimic marker lettering. The forms are mostly upright with open counters and generous curves, while stroke endings are blunt and slightly tapered in places. Proportions run on the wide side and spacing feels airy, with subtle per-glyph irregularities that keep the texture lively rather than mechanical. Numerals follow the same informal rhythm, with simple, looping constructions and a consistent softness across curves and joins.
This font works best in short-to-medium display settings such as children’s products, playful branding, posters, packaging callouts, and social media graphics where an informal, friendly voice is desirable. It can also suit craft labels, café-style signage, and casual invitations, especially when paired with a clean sans for supporting text.
The overall tone is warm, lighthearted, and approachable, with a doodled energy that reads as conversational and human. Its bouncy rhythm and rounded shapes give it a cheerful, informal character suited to friendly messaging rather than formality.
The design appears intended to capture the charm of quick, hand-lettered marker printing while staying legible and consistent enough for repeated use. Its wide, rounded silhouettes and gentle irregularity aim to communicate friendliness and fun without relying on connected script forms.
The letterforms favor smooth curves over sharp corners, and many shapes include small quirks (slight asymmetries, uneven stroke modulation) that reinforce an authentic hand-rendered feel. Readability remains solid at display sizes, while the lively outlines and variable widths add personality that can become busy in dense, small text.