Print Magew 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, greeting cards, craft branding, packaging, posters, friendly, playful, whimsical, casual, storybook, approachability, informality, handmade feel, playful display, casual readability, rounded, soft, bouncy, quirky, monoline.
A casual, hand-drawn print with smooth, rounded terminals and a mostly monoline stroke. Letterforms lean on simple vertical stems and open curves, with gentle swelling at some joins and occasional club-like ends that add a brushed-marker feel. Counters are generally open and legible, while the baseline rhythm is slightly bouncy, giving text an informal, animated texture. Capitals are relatively tall and narrow with soft curves; lowercase forms stay simple and readable, with single-storey shapes and modest ascenders/descenders.
This font works well for short to medium text where an informal, personable voice is desired—children’s materials, invitations, labels, café-style signage, and playful packaging. It is especially effective for headlines, pull quotes, and display lines where its bouncy rhythm can be appreciated without demanding dense, continuous reading.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with a lighthearted, storybook personality. Its uneven, human cadence feels conversational and handmade rather than polished or corporate, projecting a friendly, kid-adjacent charm without becoming overly chaotic.
The design appears intended to capture an easygoing handwritten print style with consistent strokes and rounded finishing, prioritizing friendliness and clarity over strict geometric regularity. Its controlled quirks and soft terminals suggest a goal of being broadly legible while still feeling distinctly hand-made and expressive.
In running text, the rounded endings and varied glyph widths create a lively color and noticeable rhythm, especially in words with repeated verticals (m/n/u). Numerals match the same soft, drawn character, and the overall set maintains consistent stroke feel across letters and figures.