Print Danim 4 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, greeting cards, hand-drawn, quirky, storybook, rustic, casual, handmade feel, expressive tone, casual display, storytelling, brushy, organic, textured, irregular, lively.
A hand-drawn print face with brush-pen edges and visibly irregular stroke contours. Strokes taper into pointed terminals and swell subtly through curves, giving a lively, slightly textured rhythm. Letterforms are generally upright with a loose baseline feel, showing natural variations in glyph width and spacing; rounded shapes (like O and 0) are more open and uneven than geometric. The lowercase is compact with relatively small counters, while ascenders and descenders are long and expressive, adding vertical movement in text.
Best suited to short-to-medium display text where its hand-rendered texture and lively irregularity can be appreciated—titles, posters, packaging, invitations, and editorial callouts. It can work for brief passages in larger sizes, but the animated stroke edges and uneven spacing make it more comfortable for expressive display than dense, small body copy.
The overall tone is informal and characterful, with a playful, slightly rustic energy. It reads like quick, confident lettering for a storybook or handmade sign—friendly and expressive rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to capture the look of quick brush lettering in an unconnected print style, prioritizing personality and human variation over typographic precision. Its tapered strokes, energetic loops, and inconsistent widths aim to create a handmade voice that feels approachable and narrative.
Uppercase forms have simple, legible silhouettes that stand up well at display sizes, while the lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic gestures (notably in letters with loops and descenders). Numerals follow the same drawn rhythm, with open curves and tapered ends that keep them cohesive with the letters.