Distressed Unmy 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, apparel, album art, logos, handwritten, vintage, expressive, rugged, casual, handmade feel, analog texture, display impact, vintage mood, casual energy, brushy, textured, slanted, lively, organic.
A slanted, brush-pen script with quick, tapered strokes and visibly uneven edges that read like ink on toothy paper. Letterforms are generally narrow with a lively, variable rhythm and modest stroke modulation, alternating between thin entry strokes and fuller downstrokes. Terminals often end in sharp flicks or blunt, dry-brush breaks, and curves show slight wobble that reinforces the hand-drawn feel. Uppercase forms lean toward simplified, sign-writer caps rather than formal calligraphy, while the lowercase stays compact with tight counters and a brisk, forward motion.
This style performs best in display settings where the textured strokes can be appreciated—posters, apparel graphics, packaging, and editorial or social headlines. It can also work for logos and wordmarks that want a handmade, vintage-leaning signature. For longer text or very small sizes, the rough edges and compact counters may reduce clarity, so generous sizing and spacing help.
The overall tone is energetic and informal, with a worn, analog character that feels pulled from vintage packaging, posters, or marker lettering. Its texture adds grit and personality, suggesting speed, spontaneity, and a touch of rebelliousness rather than refinement.
The design appears aimed at capturing fast brush lettering with deliberate wear and ink breakup, balancing legibility with a gritty, handcrafted look. It prioritizes expressive motion and analog texture to create a distinctive, personality-forward script for branding and promotional typography.
The texture is consistent enough to feel intentional, but irregular enough to show occasional rough spots and stroke chatter in joins and curves. Numerals match the same brisk, brushy construction and keep the set cohesive for headlines or short statements.