Print Bigur 2 is a light, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s, packaging, posters, invitations, education, friendly, playful, casual, approachable, whimsical, hand-printed feel, human warmth, everyday friendliness, casual legibility, rounded, monoline, bouncy, quirky, soft terminals.
A casual, monoline hand-printed face with rounded corners and softened stroke endings that mimic marker or felt-tip drawing. Strokes are steady but intentionally imperfect, with gentle waviness and small variations in curvature that create a lively rhythm. Letterforms lean toward simple geometric construction—open bowls, broad arcs, and uncomplicated joins—while keeping an organic, hand-drawn feel. Capitals are clean and readable with slightly uneven proportions; lowercase forms are compact and rounded, with single-storey shapes and straightforward ascenders/descenders. Numerals follow the same friendly, simplified construction and maintain clear differentiation at text sizes.
Well-suited for children’s materials, classroom handouts, and educational graphics where an approachable voice is needed. It also fits packaging, crafts, greeting cards, invitations, and short headlines where a friendly handwritten impression enhances the message. In UI or editorial settings, it works best for accents, labels, and short passages rather than dense body copy.
The overall tone is warm and informal, like tidy handwriting used for labels and notes. Its rounded shapes and mild irregularity give it a cheerful, human presence without feeling messy. The texture reads as relaxed and personable, suited to lighthearted communication and everyday contexts.
The design appears intended to replicate neat, informal hand printing with a controlled, legible structure. Its goal is to feel personal and cheerful while remaining clear in mixed-case text and numerals.
Spacing appears comfortably open, helping maintain clarity despite the hand-drawn irregularities. The design stays consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and figures, preserving a cohesive “printed by hand” personality in continuous text.