Print Hakit 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: kids branding, posters, packaging, comics, headlines, playful, hand-drawn, quirky, friendly, casual, handmade feel, expressive display, casual legibility, friendly tone, visual texture, brushy, rounded, chunky, bouncy, irregular.
A hand-drawn print style with thick, brush-like strokes and rounded terminals. Letterforms show intentional irregularity in width and contour, with a lively baseline bounce and varied proportions across glyphs. Curves are soft and bulbous, while some joins and stroke ends taper into pointed flicks, giving the set a marker/brush feel rather than monoline geometry. Counters are generally open and simple, and spacing reads loose and natural, prioritizing character over strict consistency.
Works best for short-to-medium text where a playful, handmade voice is desirable—such as children’s products, informal branding, posters, event flyers, packaging callouts, and comic-style captions. It can also add a friendly accent in social graphics, quotes, and headers where texture and personality are more important than typographic neutrality.
The overall tone is upbeat and informal, with a whimsical, slightly mischievous personality. Its uneven rhythm and expressive stroke endings give it a personable, DIY energy that feels approachable and fun rather than polished or corporate.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with a brush or marker, emphasizing warmth, spontaneity, and visual texture. Its irregular shapes and varied widths suggest a goal of maintaining a natural, human rhythm rather than enforcing mechanical uniformity.
Uppercase forms tend to be broader and more display-forward, while lowercase remains compact with distinct, sometimes exaggerated features (notably in letters with descenders). Numerals match the same casual, hand-rendered logic, with simplified shapes and occasional asymmetric curves that keep the texture lively in running text.