Print Imrek 2 is a bold, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, children’s, social media, playful, casual, friendly, quirky, crafty, handmade feel, casual voice, display impact, approachability, chunky, rounded, wobbly, inked, hand-drawn.
A chunky hand-drawn print with rounded terminals and visibly uneven stroke edges that mimic an inky marker. Letterforms are compact and slightly condensed, with variable character widths and subtly irregular curves that keep the texture lively. Strokes stay largely monoline in feel, with occasional thick spots and blobby joins where strokes meet, reinforcing a made-by-hand rhythm. Counters are small-to-medium and often softly pinched, and the overall spacing is a bit loose and organic rather than mechanically even.
Well suited to posters, flyers, and headlines where an informal, handmade voice is desirable. It can work effectively on packaging, labels, and craft-oriented branding that benefits from a friendly, hand-rendered feel. It’s also a natural fit for kids’ materials, casual signage, and social graphics where personality matters more than typographic neutrality.
The font conveys a warm, playful informality—like quick hand lettering on a poster or note. Its slight wobble and softened shapes read as approachable and humorous rather than polished or corporate. The bold, inky presence adds confidence while keeping the tone light and crafty.
The design appears intended to simulate casual marker-drawn lettering with an intentionally imperfect finish. Its goal is to provide a bold, readable handmade texture that feels spontaneous and human while remaining consistent enough for repeated use in display settings.
Capitals are strong and simple, while lowercase keeps a hand-lettered simplicity with minimal calligraphic influence. Numerals match the same rounded, slightly lopsided construction, giving consistent texture in headings and short bursts of text. At smaller sizes the heavy ink and tight counters can start to clog, so it visually favors display use.