Solid Idru 2 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font visually similar to 'ATF Railroad Gothic' by ATF Collection, 'Hadney Buddy' by Arterfak Project, 'Passiflora' by Compañía Tipográfica de Chile, 'MNSTR' by Gaslight, 'Burford Rustic' by Kimmy Design, 'Prismatic' by Match & Kerosene, 'Midnight Wowboy' by Mysterylab, and 'Cheapsman' by Typetemp Studio (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, stickers, event promos, playful, grunge, bold, quirky, handmade, impact, texture, attention, character, blobby, rough-edged, chunky, soft-cornered, organic.
A chunky, heavy display face with irregular, blobby silhouettes and soft, rounded corners. Strokes feel hand-formed rather than geometric, with noticeable edge wobble and occasional nicks that create a distressed, cut-out look. Counters are mostly collapsed, turning letters into dense silhouettes with only small notches and bites to suggest internal structure. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, producing an uneven rhythm that reads as intentionally imperfect.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as poster headlines, album or event artwork, packaging callouts, and playful branding moments. It works particularly well when you want a handmade, imperfect texture and can give the type room to breathe at display sizes.
The overall tone is loud, mischievous, and tactile—like inked stamps, painted signage, or cut-paper shapes. Its roughness adds a casual, rebellious energy, while the rounded massing keeps it friendly rather than aggressive.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual weight with an intentionally irregular, handcrafted feel, using solid forms and distressed edges to create a memorable silhouette-driven voice. It prioritizes personality and texture over fine detail or small-size clarity.
Because many interior openings are filled, character differentiation relies on outer silhouettes; this makes the design strongest at larger sizes where the distinctive blobs and notches are easiest to parse. The numerals match the same solid, irregular language and read as bold icons rather than text figures.