Print Wogef 2 is a light, normal width, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, quotes, playful, sketchy, casual, quirky, friendly, handwritten feel, informality, personality, approachability, hand-drawn, monoline, marker-like, wiry, irregular.
A hand-drawn print face with lively, uneven strokes and a lightly sketchy, double-traced feel in many curves and bowls. Letterforms are mostly monoline with subtle pressure variation and occasional rough terminals, giving edges a slightly ragged, inked texture. Proportions are informal and variable: widths shift noticeably from glyph to glyph, rounds are generously open, and counters stay readable despite the loose construction. The lowercase is compact with short extenders, while caps are tall and simple, keeping the overall silhouette quick and spontaneous rather than engineered.
Best suited for display sizes where its hand-drawn texture and irregular rhythm can read as intentional character—posters, packaging accents, social graphics, short headlines, and pull quotes. It can also work for light, informal UI labels or invitations when a personal, written-by-hand feel is desired, but it is less appropriate for dense body text where the jitter and variable widths may reduce readability.
The tone is casual and human, like quick notes or a classroom marker on paper. Its jittery outlines and relaxed rhythm communicate approachability and humor, with a slightly mischievous, doodled energy that feels more personal than polished.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, unconnected handwritten printing with a lightly scribbled outline, prioritizing warmth and personality over typographic precision. Its goal is to deliver an authentic, human-made look that adds charm and informality to modern graphic layouts.
The font maintains consistent stroke character across letters and numerals, but embraces irregularities in curvature, joins, and terminal angles for personality. Numerals match the same hand-drawn logic, with open, rounded forms and occasional overrun strokes that reinforce the sketchbook aesthetic.