Print Addu 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, greeting cards, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, lively, handmade feel, casual voice, high impact, easy readability, brushy, rounded, bouncy, chunky, informal.
A casual, brush-like handwritten print with a consistent forward slant and thick, rounded strokes. Terminals are soft and slightly blunted, with gentle swelling that suggests pressure from a marker or brush pen rather than a rigid monoline tool. Letterforms are compact and simplified, with open, readable counters and a slightly bouncy baseline rhythm; widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the hand-drawn feel. Numerals and capitals match the same chunky, rounded construction, and the overall texture stays dark and even at text sizes.
Well-suited to short-to-medium text where a friendly, handmade tone is desired—posters, packaging callouts, café menus, kids-focused materials, social graphics, and casual headlines. It can also work for pull quotes or captions when you want a bold handwritten presence without fully connected script behavior.
The font reads warm and personable, with an easygoing, conversational tone. Its energetic slant and rounded forms give it a cheerful, youthful voice that feels handmade without looking messy. Overall it conveys friendly informality—more “note on a poster” than “formal script.”
Likely designed to mimic quick, confident marker lettering: a sturdy, slanted handwritten print that stays legible while projecting personality. The emphasis is on an upbeat, approachable voice and a strong black texture that holds up in display settings.
Capitals are assertive and blocky with softened corners, while lowercase keeps a simple printed structure rather than fully cursive connections. Curves (C, G, S, O) are smooth and heavy, and diagonals (K, V, W, X, Y) have a quick, brushed snap that adds motion. Spacing appears naturally irregular in a controlled way, contributing to a lively, human texture in paragraphs.