Print Eski 2 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, stickers, album art, headlines, grunge, playful, handmade, rowdy, casual, diy texture, handmade impact, gritty emphasis, informal voice, poster punch, brushy, textured, chunky, irregular, blotchy.
A thick, marker-like handprint with compact proportions and visibly irregular edges. Strokes are mostly monoline in feel but show subtle thick–thin variation from pressure and dry-brush texture, leaving nicks and rough terminals. Counters are simple and often tight, with rounded forms that feel slightly compressed, and a baseline rhythm that wobbles just enough to read as drawn rather than constructed. Numerals and capitals carry the same chunky, uneven silhouette, giving the set a consistent, deliberately imperfect texture.
Best suited for display contexts where a bold, handmade texture is a feature: posters, event flyers, social graphics, product packaging, stickers, and album or zine-style artwork. It can also work for short pull quotes or section headers when you want a casual, gritty emphasis, but it will be most effective in larger sizes where the rough edges remain intentional rather than noisy.
The overall tone is energetic and mischievous, like quick signage or a bold note written with a worn marker. The roughened outlines add a gritty, DIY attitude while the rounded shapes keep it friendly and approachable. It reads as informal and attention-seeking, with a hint of punk/garage-band character.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted or marker-drawn lettering—bold, compact, and slightly messy—while staying legible enough for punchy titles. Its consistent roughness suggests a controlled grunge effect aimed at adding personality and attitude to otherwise straightforward text.
Spacing feels somewhat tight and lively, helping words form dense, dark shapes that pop on light backgrounds. The texture is prominent even at moderate sizes, so the font’s character comes through strongly in headlines and short lines. The letterforms favor simple construction over precision, reinforcing the hand-drawn authenticity.