Print Emka 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, branding, social media, casual, expressive, rustic, handmade, playful, handmade feel, energetic tone, textured brush, informal voice, display impact, brushy, textured, dry-brush, angular, irregular.
A lively hand-drawn print style with a dry-brush texture and visibly uneven stroke edges. Letterforms lean forward with a brisk, handwritten rhythm, mixing rounded bowls with sharper, wedge-like terminals and occasional tapered starts/finishes. Proportions are compact with relatively small lowercase bodies and long, loose extenders, while spacing and widths vary enough to keep the line feeling organic rather than mechanically consistent. The overall color is dark and punchy, with subtle stroke modulation that reads like pressure changes from a marker or brush.
Best suited to display and short-to-medium passages where personality is more important than typographic neutrality—posters, event graphics, packaging, and brand accents. It also works well for social content and editorial callouts where a handmade, brushy texture can add energy and warmth.
The font conveys an informal, human presence—quick, energetic, and slightly gritty. Its textured strokes and irregularities suggest spontaneity and a handmade authenticity, lending a friendly, approachable tone with a hint of rough-edged attitude.
The design appears intended to emulate fast, confident brush/marker lettering in an unconnected print style, preserving natural variation and texture to feel genuinely hand-rendered. It prioritizes expressive stroke character and an energetic slant to create a distinctive, artisanal voice in headings and informal copy.
Uppercase forms are simple and bold with open shapes that remain recognizable despite the texture, while lowercase letters are more gestural and compact, increasing the handwritten feel in longer text. Numerals share the same brisk, drawn-in-one-go character, with slightly varied widths and stroke endings that keep them from looking too polished.