Print Darim 2 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, kids, social media, headlines, playful, friendly, casual, quirky, handmade, human warmth, informal tone, hand-drawn charm, approachability, casual readability, rounded, brushy, bouncy, organic, uneven.
A casual handwritten print with rounded, slightly bulbous terminals and softly tapered strokes that suggest a felt-tip or brush-pen texture. Letterforms are mostly upright but show gentle wobble and irregular stroke edges, with subtle variation in width and spacing that keeps the rhythm lively. Caps are simple and open, while lowercase forms stay compact with a relatively short x-height and modest ascenders/descenders; counters are generally wide and airy, supporting legibility at display sizes. Numerals are similarly informal, with smooth curves and simplified construction that matches the letterforms.
Well suited for short-to-medium text in friendly contexts such as posters, product packaging, labels, invitations, and social graphics. It also fits children’s materials and casual brand messaging where a personable, hand-drawn feel is desired; for best results, use at larger sizes where the textured stroke edges and lively rhythm read clearly.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, with a spontaneous, doodled character that feels human rather than engineered. Its slight irregularities and bouncy rhythm give it a lighthearted, conversational voice suited to informal communication.
The design appears intended to deliver an informal, hand-rendered print style that balances readability with an intentionally imperfect, handmade texture. Its rounded forms and gentle stroke modulation aim to communicate friendliness and ease while remaining cohesive across the basic Latin set and numerals shown.
The font maintains consistent stroke color and a coherent handwritten logic across caps, lowercase, and figures, while intentionally preserving small variations in baseline, curvature, and terminal shaping. Round letters and bowls dominate the silhouette, and straight strokes tend to end in softened, brush-like tips rather than crisp corners.