Print Golup 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, headlines, logotypes, halloween, gothic, spooky, rustic, storybook, old-world, atmosphere, vintage feel, handmade texture, dramatic titles, angular, chiseled, narrow, irregular, textured.
This font is a narrow, upright display face with hand-drawn, chiseled-looking strokes. Letterforms are built from sharp angles and tapered terminals, with a subtly uneven, inked texture that suggests marker or brush pressure without strong thick–thin contrast. Counters are tight and verticals dominate, creating a condensed rhythm, while widths vary slightly from glyph to glyph for a lively, handmade cadence. Capitals feel tall and assertive; lowercase retains a compact x-height and simplified shapes that prioritize silhouette over smooth curves.
Best suited to headlines, posters, title treatments, packaging accents, and logotype-style wordmarks where its condensed vertical rhythm can read as intentional and dramatic. It also works well for themed applications such as spooky events, fantasy or folklore covers, craft labels, and signage that benefits from a handmade, vintage edge.
The overall tone is gothic and slightly theatrical, with a spooky, old-world flavor that recalls vintage posters, folklore titles, and Halloween ephemera. Its roughened edges and narrow stance add tension and drama, giving text an ominous, storybook intensity rather than a polished editorial voice.
The design appears intended to deliver a hand-rendered gothic display voice: condensed, angular, and slightly rough to evoke age, mystery, and craft. Its consistent chiseled terminals and irregular texture aim to provide character and atmosphere more than neutral readability.
Spacing appears fairly tight and the tall, narrow forms create a strong vertical texture in lines of text, which can look striking in short phrases but busier in longer passages. The numerals and uppercase share the same angular, carved personality, helping mixed-content settings (titles with dates, prices, or episode numbers) feel consistent.