Print Unrew 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, posters, headlines, greeting cards, playful, friendly, handmade, whimsical, casual, handmade charm, casual readability, friendly tone, playful texture, rounded, bouncy, choppy, quirky, textured.
A lively hand-drawn print face with slightly uneven stroke edges and gently rounded terminals that give the letters a carved/inked look. Proportions are compact and somewhat condensed, with a modest x-height and subtly irregular widths that create a natural, variable rhythm. Curves are soft and slightly asymmetrical, while straights show a faint wobble; counters tend to be small-to-medium and the overall color stays solid without looking heavy. Capitals are simple and upright, and the lowercase mixes straightforward forms with a few quirky, looped details (notably in letters like g, y, and j), reinforcing the informal construction.
Well suited to playful editorial and branding contexts such as children’s materials, casual packaging, café or craft-market signage, event posters, and friendly headlines. It can also work for short bursts of body text when a personable, informal voice is desired, especially with generous sizing and spacing.
The font reads warm, approachable, and a bit mischievous—like quick marker lettering refined into a consistent set. Its gentle imperfections and bouncy spacing give text an easygoing, conversational tone that feels human rather than mechanical.
The design appears intended to capture the charm of hand-drawn lettering while maintaining enough consistency for repeated use in titles and short passages. Its narrow, upright structure and lightly textured strokes aim to balance clarity with a distinctly handmade personality.
Numerals follow the same handmade logic, with rounded shapes and small idiosyncrasies that keep them from looking strictly geometric. In longer text, the consistent upright stance helps readability, while the irregularities add texture best appreciated at display and subhead sizes rather than very small settings.