Print Orgog 2 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, logos, energetic, casual, urban, confident, sporty, expressiveness, impact, handmade feel, modern branding, speed, brushy, slanted, rounded, punchy, informal.
A punchy, brush-pen style script with a consistent rightward slant and compact proportions. Strokes appear pressure-based but largely uniform in thickness, with rounded terminals and occasional tapered flicks that suggest quick, confident movement. Letterforms are mostly unconnected in running text, relying on rhythm and repeated angles for coherence, while capitals skew tall and angular with simplified, gestural construction. The overall texture is dense and dark, with slightly irregular curves and joins that preserve a hand-made feel while staying visually consistent across the set.
Best suited to display settings where a bold handwritten accent is needed—posters, punchy headlines, packaging callouts, and social media graphics. It can also work for logo wordmarks or short taglines where an energetic, brush-script voice is desired, especially when paired with a neutral sans for supporting text.
The tone feels informal and energetic, like a marker signature or street-style headline. Its brisk stroke motion and condensed footprint give it a confident, modern attitude that reads as sporty and expressive rather than delicate or formal.
The design appears intended to capture the speed and spontaneity of brush lettering while remaining consistent enough for repeatable typography. Its compact, slanted forms prioritize impact and motion, aiming for a contemporary handwritten look that stands out in branding and promotional contexts.
Uppercase forms lean toward single-stroke gesture shapes, which increases personality and speed while sacrificing some traditional calligraphic refinement. Numerals follow the same brushed, slanted logic and maintain strong presence at small-to-medium sizes, though the compact counters and heavy texture favor display use over long passages.