Print Podom 1 is a very bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, children’s, branding, headlines, playful, cheerful, folksy, friendly, retro, friendly voice, hand-drawn feel, whimsical display, bold impact, rounded, bouncy, chunky, soft terminals, cartoonish.
A chunky, rounded display face with smooth, swollen strokes and distinctly soft terminals. Letterforms show an informal, hand-drawn regularity: curves are generous, counters are compact, and many joins feel slightly pinched, creating a lively bounce. The uppercase has broad, simplified silhouettes, while the lowercase mixes single-story forms and looping descenders for added personality. Overall spacing and widths vary naturally from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a casual, drawn rhythm while keeping forms clear at larger sizes.
Best suited for display applications where personality is the priority: posters, playful branding, packaging, signage, and children’s or family-oriented materials. It also works well for short pull quotes, labels, and social graphics where the bold, rounded forms can carry a friendly message without needing fine detail.
The font communicates warmth and humor, with a jaunty, homemade charm that feels inviting rather than formal. Its buoyant curves and heavy ink-like presence suggest a playful, kid-friendly tone with a hint of vintage poster personality. It reads as expressive and approachable—more whimsical than refined.
The design appears intended to mimic confident, marker-like hand lettering in a cleaned-up, repeatable form—delivering a bold, approachable voice with consistent shapes and a deliberately bouncy rhythm. It emphasizes charm and immediacy over precision, aiming for memorable, feel-good display impact.
The numerals follow the same rounded, weighty construction, with simplified shapes and strong black presence that suit headings and short bursts of text. The sample paragraph shows that the texture stays cohesive in multi-line settings, though the tight counters and heavy strokes make it feel more at home in display contexts than in small-size reading.