Print Fevu 2 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social media, logo concepts, bold, energetic, brushy, expressive, casual, impact, handmade, emphasis, informality, motion, textured, painterly, slanted, chunky, organic.
A thick, brush-pen style with a pronounced rightward slant and visibly textured stroke edges. Letterforms are compact and upright in footprint, with simplified, slightly irregular construction that mimics fast marker strokes. Terminals tend to be blunt or tapered with occasional flicks, and counters are tight, giving the face a dense, punchy color on the page. Spacing and widths vary subtly between glyphs, reinforcing the hand-made rhythm while remaining consistent enough for short text lines.
This font suits punchy display applications such as posters, event flyers, bold headlines, product packaging, and social graphics where a hand-painted emphasis is desirable. It can also work for logo concepts or badges when a casual, brush-written signature is needed, especially at medium-to-large sizes where the texture becomes a feature.
The overall tone is assertive and lively, like hand-lettered signage made in one confident pass. The roughened edges and compact forms add a gritty, streetwise feel, while the steady slant keeps it dynamic and forward-moving. It reads as informal and friendly, with a touch of urgency and emphasis.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of thick brush lettering—fast, emphatic strokes with visible texture and a consistent slant—while keeping shapes legible enough for short phrases. It prioritizes visual impact and a human, hand-made cadence over geometric precision.
Uppercase and lowercase share a cohesive brush vocabulary, and the numerals match the same heavy, gestural construction. The texture is prominent even at larger sizes, so it will visually “grab” attention but can feel busy if used too small or tightly set. The form language favors impact over refinement, making it best as a display voice rather than long-form reading.