Print Amkan 2 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, quotes, social, casual, airy, friendly, hand-drawn, lively, handwritten tone, casual branding, quick notes, display accent, personal voice, monoline, tall, condensed, leaning, loose.
A tall, condensed handwritten print with a consistent monoline stroke and a steady rightward slant. Letterforms are simplified and open, with generous inner counters and a light, quick rhythm that reads like fast marker or pen writing. Ascenders and capitals rise prominently above the small lowercase bodies, and terminals are mostly rounded or softly tapered rather than sharply cut. Overall spacing is slightly irregular in a natural way, reinforcing the hand-drawn character while maintaining clear shapes.
Best suited for short headlines, quotes, captions, and casual branding where a handwritten voice is desired. It works well on posters, packaging, social graphics, and editorial callouts, especially when set at medium-to-large sizes where the tall, narrow shapes and airy spacing can breathe. It can also support light UI accents or labels when used sparingly and with ample size.
The font conveys an informal, personable tone—lightweight and breezy, with a spontaneous, notebook-like feel. Its narrow, upright-tall proportions give it a modern casualness, while the gentle slant and smooth curves keep it approachable and playful rather than formal.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, tidy hand printing with a lean, condensed stance—delivering a friendly personal note without connecting strokes. It prioritizes an effortless, contemporary handwritten feel and straightforward legibility over calligraphic complexity.
In the samples, long text lines maintain a consistent texture, with a noticeable vertical emphasis from tall capitals and ascenders. The numerals follow the same handwritten logic, staying simple and legible with minimal ornament. The overall color on the page remains even due to the uniform stroke, but the narrow forms and small lowercase proportions make it feel more display-oriented than text-oriented at small sizes.