Print Bakup 2 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, greeting cards, packaging, children’s books, whimsical, quirky, playful, hand-drawn, airy, handmade feel, casual display, friendly tone, storybook voice, personal notes, spindly, tall, monoline, irregular, bouncy.
A tall, spindly handwritten print with monoline strokes and gently wavering outlines that preserve a natural pen-drawn rhythm. Forms are narrow and vertically emphasized, with generous ascenders and descenders and a notably small x-height, giving lowercase letters a delicate, top-heavy feel. Terminals are mostly rounded or softly tapered, and curves stay open and light, while straight stems show slight irregularity that keeps the texture organic rather than geometric. Spacing and widths vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing the informal, drawn-by-hand character.
Best suited for display applications where a personable, hand-lettered feel is desired: headlines, posters, invitations, greeting cards, and boutique packaging. It can also work for short quotes or captions where a playful, handmade tone is more important than long-form readability. Use at moderate-to-large sizes to preserve its fine stroke detail and tall proportions.
The overall tone is whimsical and slightly quirky—more storybook and personal than formal or technical. Its narrow, airy construction feels lighthearted and a bit eccentric, like quick lettering on a note or a handmade label. The unevenness reads as intentional charm, adding warmth and individuality to short messages.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of casual handwriting while remaining legible as unconnected print. By emphasizing height, narrowness, and slight stroke wobble, it aims to deliver a distinctive, personable voice that feels crafted rather than typeset.
Uppercase letters read especially tall and slender, creating a distinctive vertical cadence in mixed-case settings. Numerals share the same thin, hand-drawn construction and feel consistent with the alphabet, supporting casual display use. The delicate strokes and narrow proportions can make dense paragraphs feel busy, but they give headings and short lines a lively, animated texture.