Calligraphic Weho 2 is a bold, very wide, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, branding, social media, expressive, casual, friendly, energetic, playful, handmade feel, display impact, personal tone, quick fluency, bold presence, brushy, rounded terminals, organic, open counters, soft corners.
The letterforms are brush-like and monoline-leaning with subtle stroke modulation, showing rounded terminals and occasional pointed flicks where strokes taper or change direction. Shapes are broad and open, with generous horizontal movement, soft corners, and an organic, slightly irregular outline that reinforces the handwritten origin. Spacing and widths vary naturally across glyphs, producing a rolling, calligraphic rhythm; counters tend to be roomy, and joins are smooth rather than sharply constructed.
This font works best for display roles where a handwritten, upbeat character is desirable: posters, packaging, social graphics, quotes, invitations, menus, and branding that wants a personable tone. It can also serve for short to medium text in larger sizes where the broad strokes and organic spacing read clearly, especially in punchy lines or title treatments.
This font conveys an energetic, expressive tone with a confident, hand-rendered presence. Its swooping curves and lively rhythm suggest spontaneity and personality, while the steady baseline and consistent texture keep it approachable rather than chaotic. Overall it feels friendly, informal, and slightly dramatic—like a bold marker note with a touch of flourish.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident brush lettering—capturing the natural variation and momentum of hand-drawn strokes while remaining readable in short passages. Its wide, flowing silhouettes prioritize personality and emphasis, suggesting a font built to add voice and immediacy to headlines and informal messaging.
The sample text shows a consistent baseline and a cohesive stroke texture across upper- and lowercase, with distinctive, looped forms and occasional extended entry/exit strokes that add movement. Numerals match the same brush rhythm and rounded finishing, keeping a unified voice across alphanumerics.