Print Tumoj 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, branding, signage, playful, expressive, retro, folksy, energetic, handcrafted feel, display impact, retro charm, casual warmth, expressive lettering, brushy, calligraphic, swashy, rounded, chunky.
This font uses a brush-pen inspired construction with thick, rounded strokes and tapered terminals that suggest fast, confident hand movement. Letterforms lean forward with a lively rhythm, mixing broad curves with occasional sharp hooks and wedge-like entry/exit strokes. Proportions are irregular in an intentional way: widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, counters are compact, and joins feel hand-shaped rather than mechanically uniform. Overall spacing reads open enough for display settings, while the stroke endings and internal shapes keep a distinctly handwritten texture.
Best suited to short-to-medium display copy where personality is the priority—posters, headlines, product packaging, café or event signage, and brand marks that want a hand-rendered feel. It can work in brief editorial callouts or pull quotes, but the textured brush forms and variable widths are most effective at larger sizes.
The tone is informal and characterful, evoking a vintage sign-painting or hand-lettered poster feel. Its energetic slant and punchy silhouettes give it a friendly, slightly cheeky voice that suits expressive messaging more than restrained corporate typography.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted or brush-written lettering while remaining cohesive across a full alphanumeric set. Its emphasis on dynamic stroke tapering, forward motion, and bold silhouettes suggests a goal of delivering warm, attention-grabbing display typography with an artisanal, human touch.
Uppercase forms show strong, graphic silhouettes with occasional exaggerated curves and soft, brushy terminals, while lowercase maintains a consistent forward momentum and a casual, handwritten cadence. Numerals follow the same brush logic, with rounded forms and tapered strokes that maintain visual cohesion in mixed text.