Typewriter Abpu 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: typewriter styling, editorial headings, posters, labels, book covers, retro, analog, workmanlike, quirky, literary, typewriter evocation, analog texture, practical readability, vintage character, slab serif, inked, blunted, worn edges, soft corners.
A monospaced slab-serif design with sturdy, compact letterforms and subtly uneven, inked contours. Strokes are relatively uniform with gentle contrast, and terminals tend to be blunt with small wedge-like flares that read as typewriter-inspired slabs. Curves are slightly pinched and corners are softly rounded, giving counters an organic, pressed impression rather than crisp geometry. Overall spacing is mechanically even, but the outlines introduce a mild irregularity that adds texture while keeping a consistent rhythm across lines.
Well-suited for designs that want a typewritten or archival flavor: editorial titles, pull quotes, posters, packaging labels, and book or zine covers. It also works for UI or layout moments where strict monospaced alignment is useful but a sterile coding aesthetic is not desired.
The font conveys a vintage, analog tone—part newsroom copy, part well-used office typewriter. Its slightly roughened edges and friendly slab details create an informal, human presence that feels practical and a bit nostalgic. The result is straightforward and readable, with just enough character to suggest paper, ink, and mechanical imprinting.
Likely intended to evoke mechanical typing with a subtly imperfect imprint, balancing disciplined monospaced structure with a lightly distressed, inked outline for character. The design prioritizes clear, sturdy silhouettes and consistent spacing while adding just enough texture to feel tactile and lived-in.
Uppercase forms are broad and steady with prominent slab feet and caps, while lowercase maintains a robust, sturdy presence with clear differentiation between similar shapes. Numerals are simple and upright, matching the same inked, slightly worn contour language for cohesive text color at display and short-text sizes.