Typewriter Leha 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, editorial, props, vintage, worn, utilitarian, gritty, analog, typewriter feel, aged texture, analog imprint, document tone, retro utility, blotty, rough-edged, inked, stubby, soft-cornered.
A heavy, monoline slab-serif design with a distinctly mechanical rhythm and equal character widths. Strokes are thick and low-contrast, with rounded, slightly swollen terminals and slab feet that feel stamped rather than drawn. The outlines show deliberate irregularity—soft wobble, uneven edges, and occasional ink-like blobs—giving each letter a subtly distressed imprint while keeping the forms clear and stable. Counters are compact and apertures are modest, contributing to a dense, typewritten texture in text settings.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium text where a typewritten, aged impression is desirable—posters, book covers, menus, packaging, and editorial callouts. It can also work well for UI theming, labels, or on-screen props where a believable typed/printed artifact is part of the visual language.
The overall tone is vintage and workmanlike, evoking typed documents, carbon copies, and worn ribbons. Its imperfect edges and inky texture add grit and character, suggesting tactile, analog printing rather than clean digital output.
The design appears intended to recreate a classic typewriter voice with added wear: a solid slab-serif skeleton combined with controlled distress to simulate ink spread, ribbon fatigue, and imperfect strike. The goal is characterful authenticity without sacrificing basic readability.
The texture reads as consistent across the set, with minor per-glyph variations that mimic impression and ink spread. Numerals are sturdy and highly legible, and the lowercase maintains a straightforward, functional construction that supports a steady line of text.