Distressed Objo 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, book covers, labels, social graphics, handmade, rustic, quirky, casual, playful, handcrafted feel, ink texture, casual display, humanist warmth, brushy, textured, uneven, organic, sketchy.
A narrow, hand-rendered text face with brush-like strokes and visibly irregular edges. Letterforms are mostly upright with simple, open constructions and modest contrast that comes from natural marker/brush pressure rather than formal modulation. Strokes show slight wobble, rough terminals, and occasional thickened spots, creating an intentionally imperfect rhythm. Counters are generally generous for a distressed style, while widths vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a drawn, non-mechanical feel.
This font suits display uses that benefit from an organic, tactile texture—posters, packaging, labels, and book covers—especially where a handmade or vintage-casual tone is desired. It can work for short paragraphs or captions when set with ample size and line spacing, but it will be most effective in headlines, pull quotes, and branded phrases where the distressed stroke character can be appreciated.
The overall tone is informal and human, with a rustic, slightly worn personality that feels crafty and approachable. Its texture reads like ink on paper—lively and a bit mischievous—making it better suited to expressive messaging than polished corporate voice.
The design appears intended to simulate quick brush or marker lettering with a lightly worn print texture, balancing legibility with expressive irregularity. It aims to deliver a crafted, human-made impression while remaining usable across common headline and short-text applications.
The texture is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, with especially noticeable roughness at curves and joins. Spacing appears comfortable in running text, though the uneven stroke edges create a lively surface that becomes more prominent at larger sizes. Numerals match the same handwritten logic, keeping the set cohesive for headlines and short copy.