Print Yamoz 2 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, album covers, energetic, expressive, casual, edgy, handmade, handmade impact, quick lettering, texture emphasis, headline punch, brushy, dry brush, textured, slanted, gestural.
A lively brush-pen script with a pronounced right slant and high-contrast strokes that shift from fine hairlines to heavier downstrokes. The outlines show visible texture and slight roughness, suggesting a dry-brush or marker grain rather than a perfectly smooth vector stroke. Letterforms are narrow and tall with compact bowls and a short lowercase x-height, giving the text a quick, vertical rhythm. Spacing is somewhat irregular in an intentional, handwritten way, with varied stroke endings and occasional tapered terminals that emphasize motion.
Best suited to short bursts of text—posters, cover titles, packaging callouts, social media graphics, and promotional headlines—where the slanted brush rhythm can lead the eye. It can also work for quotes or subheads when set with ample tracking and line spacing, but its texture and compact x-height make it less ideal for long-form reading at small sizes.
The overall tone is spontaneous and punchy, like fast lettering for headlines or notes made with a confident hand. Its textured strokes add grit and urgency, creating an expressive, slightly rebellious feel while still reading as friendly and informal.
The design appears intended to capture fast, confident brush lettering with a gritty texture and strong directional movement. It prioritizes personality and impact over uniformity, aiming for an authentic, hand-drawn look that feels immediate and contemporary.
Uppercase characters read as simplified, calligraphic caps with strong diagonals and occasional exaggerated entries and exits, while the lowercase stays more restrained and compact. Numerals follow the same brush logic, with angular forms and brisk, abbreviated curves. The texture becomes more noticeable at larger sizes, where the overlapping stroke grain and tapering give it a distinctly handmade character.