Print Wibey 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: quotes, packaging, social graphics, posters, invitations, casual, personal, expressive, friendly, dynamic, handwritten voice, casual branding, expressive display, quick note feel, brushy, slanted, monoline, tapered, looping.
This font is a handwritten, print-style script with a consistent rightward slant and mostly unconnected letterforms. Strokes feel monoline overall but show subtle tapering at terminals, as if made with a small brush or flexible pen. Uppercase letters are more flamboyant, featuring occasional loops and long entry/exit strokes, while the lowercase stays compact with simplified, narrow forms and restrained counters. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, creating a lively rhythm that remains readable in word shapes, especially in the provided pangram samples.
It works well for short-to-medium text where a human, informal voice is desired—quotes, greeting cards, invitations, packaging callouts, café-style signage, and social media graphics. The expressive capitals make it especially effective for headings and highlighted words, while the narrower lowercase can support compact lines of copy when readability is prioritized.
The overall tone is informal and personable, with a quick, confident handwritten cadence. Its slant and brisk strokes give it a sense of motion and spontaneity, while the smoother curves and occasional swashes add a gentle, friendly elegance.
The design appears intended to capture a natural, everyday handwriting look with a touch of brush-script flair, balancing quick pen movement with enough consistency to set complete sentences. Emphasis seems placed on energetic word shapes and expressive capitals for display-forward typography.
Capital letters carry much of the personality, with several showing pronounced curves and extended strokes that can become prominent in all-caps or title settings. Numerals match the same handwritten logic, staying simple and slightly slanted, suited to casual contexts rather than rigid alignment.