Print Tylel 2 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: children’s books, packaging, posters, headlines, craft branding, playful, friendly, hand-drawn, quirky, casual, human warmth, casual charm, approachability, whimsy, display impact, rounded, soft corners, bouncy baseline, chunky, high ink-trap feel.
This typeface features chunky, rounded letterforms with a hand-drawn, marker-like solidity and subtly uneven rhythm. Strokes are generally smooth but slightly wobbly, with softened terminals and occasional tapered joins that keep the shapes from feeling mechanical. Counters are open and generous, and the proportions vary from glyph to glyph, creating a lively texture across words. Uppercase forms are compact and buoyant, while the lowercase shows simple, single-storey constructions and a friendly, informal silhouette; numerals follow the same rounded, slightly irregular logic.
Best suited to short to medium-length display settings where personality is the priority—such as children’s materials, playful packaging, café or snack branding, event posters, social graphics, and craft or DIY-themed identities. It can also work for pull quotes and section headers when you want a friendly, hand-made voice.
The overall tone is upbeat and approachable, with a casual, homemade charm. Its mild irregularities and soft curves give it a warm, kid-friendly personality that reads as informal, optimistic, and a bit whimsical rather than strict or corporate.
The design appears intended to mimic confident, hand-printed lettering with a consistent marker weight, prioritizing warmth and approachability over precision. Its rounded geometry and slightly irregular rhythm suggest a deliberate effort to feel human, casual, and inviting while remaining clear and readable.
In text, the weight and rounded shapes create strong color on the page, while the unevenness adds character and prevents a rigid grid-like feel. Spacing appears comfortably loose, helping the dense strokes stay legible at display sizes, though the playful proportions make it feel intentionally expressive rather than typographically restrained.