Print Tomu 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, packaging, posters, craft labels, headlines, playful, friendly, casual, youthful, handmade, approachability, handmade charm, cheerful display, clear readability, rounded, chunky, bouncy, soft terminals, marker-like.
A rounded, heavy handwritten print with softly blunted terminals and gently irregular curves that keep a natural, drawn-by-hand rhythm. Strokes appear marker-like with moderate contrast and frequent swelling at joins, producing a chunky, cushioned silhouette. Proportions vary slightly from glyph to glyph, with wide bowls (O, Q) and compact counters in letters like a, e, and s; overall spacing feels open and readable. Figures are simple and friendly, with smooth, continuous forms and a slight bounce across the baseline in running text.
Works well for children’s products, playful branding, packaging, posters, and casual display copy where warmth and approachability matter. It also suits craft labels, invitations, and social graphics that benefit from a handwritten feel with strong legibility.
The tone is approachable and upbeat, evoking classroom notes, kids’ materials, and cheerful handmade signage. Its rounded weight and informal consistency give it a warm, non-serious voice that feels personable rather than corporate.
Likely designed to deliver a friendly, hand-lettered print look with confident weight and smooth rounded forms, prioritizing charm and readability over strict geometric precision. The consistent stroke mass and softened corners suggest an aim for versatile, cheerful display typography that still holds up in short text settings.
The lowercase has a single-storey a and g, a simple r, and a bulbous, looped e, reinforcing an easygoing print-hand style. The capital set remains uncomplicated and geometric-leaning but keeps hand-drawn irregularities, especially in curves and diagonals. At text sizes it maintains clarity, while the heavy shapes make it most at home in short to medium lines rather than dense paragraphs.