Print Engum 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, book covers, branding, brushed, expressive, casual, dynamic, vintage, handmade feel, informal emphasis, brush texture, display impact, textured, slanted, rough-edged, ink-like, gestural.
A slanted, brushy handwritten style with visibly textured edges and ink buildup that creates lively, irregular outlines. Strokes show a natural pressure rhythm, with tapered entries and exits and occasional thickened joins, giving letters a slightly rugged, dry-brush feel. Forms are generally compact with quick, angular turns and simplified counters, while spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an authentic hand-rendered cadence. Numerals and capitals carry the same energetic, slightly uneven stroke finish, keeping the set cohesive in tone.
This font is well suited to short, attention-grabbing text such as posters, headlines, packaging labels, and book covers where a handcrafted brush feel is desirable. It can also work for branding and promotional graphics that benefit from a casual, expressive voice, especially when paired with a simpler secondary text face for longer reading.
The overall tone is informal and energetic, with a bold, hand-painted immediacy. Its rough texture and forward lean suggest speed, emphasis, and a slightly vintage, poster-like attitude rather than a polished calligraphic refinement.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of fast brush lettering—textured, emphatic, and slightly irregular—while remaining legible enough for punchy lines of display copy. Its varied widths and rough stroke edges aim to preserve a natural, hand-made look in repeated characters.
The texture reads strongly at display sizes and can introduce visual noise at very small sizes, especially where tight joins and rough edges cluster. The baseline and stroke edges intentionally wobble slightly, which adds character but also makes it feel more expressive than neutral.