Print Afbez 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: packaging, posters, headlines, social media, greeting cards, casual, friendly, playful, handmade, lively, human touch, informal branding, quick note, expressive display, casual readability, brushy, organic, loose, tall, quirky.
A compact, handwritten print style with a right-leaning posture and brisk, brush-like strokes. Letterforms are tall and slim, with rounded joins, tapered terminals, and slightly uneven stroke edges that keep the texture organic. Curves are open and simplified, counters stay clear, and spacing feels naturally irregular in a handwritten way while remaining readable. Uppercase forms are narrow and slightly angular, while lowercase keeps a small, tidy core with modest ascenders and descenders; numerals are similarly quick and single-stroke in feel.
Works best for short to medium copy where a friendly, handwritten voice is desirable—packaging callouts, café menus, posters, social posts, greeting cards, and casual branding. It can also suit labels and captions when you want an informal, human feel, especially at larger sizes where the brush texture and narrow proportions read clearly.
The overall tone is informal and personable, like quick marker lettering on a note or label. Its lively rhythm and small inconsistencies convey spontaneity and approachability rather than formality, giving text a conversational, upbeat character.
Likely drawn to capture the immediacy of quick brush-pen handwriting while staying legible as an unconnected print. The narrow, upright-tall proportions and consistent slant suggest an intention to fit expressive text into tighter spaces without losing an energetic, handmade look.
The design maintains a consistent slanted rhythm across caps, lowercase, and figures, with occasional exaggerated gestures (notably in letters like J, Q, and y) that add personality. The stroke endings frequently flick or hook, reinforcing a hand-drawn motion and making it especially expressive at display sizes.