Inline Ammo 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, kids branding, social graphics, playful, hand-drawn, quirky, friendly, casual, handmade charm, decorative detail, friendly display, casual branding, monoline, rounded, bubbly, informal, whimsical.
A hand-drawn inline display face with rounded, slightly wobbly outlines and a consistent carved inner line that creates a hollow, double-stroke effect throughout. Strokes read mostly monoline with gentle, uneven pressure and soft terminals, giving the contours an organic marker/pen feel rather than strict geometry. Counters are generous and shapes are simplified, with tall ascenders/descenders and compact lowercase proportions that emphasize the vertical rhythm. Numerals and capitals keep the same casual construction, with subtle inconsistencies that enhance the handmade character while remaining broadly legible at display sizes.
Works best in headlines, short copy, and branding moments where a friendly handmade vibe is desired—posters, packaging, craft or café identities, kids-oriented materials, and social graphics. It can also serve as an accent font paired with a clean sans for longer reading.
The inline cut-through lends a lively, crafty personality—more doodled than formal—suggesting upbeat, approachable communication. Its irregular rhythm and rounded forms feel youthful and personable, with a lighthearted tone suited to cheerful branding and informal messaging.
Designed to provide an instantly recognizable hand-lettered look with built-in inline ornamentation, delivering personality and motion without relying on extra effects. The goal appears to be approachable display typography that feels casual and human while staying clear in short bursts.
The interior inline detail becomes more prominent as sizes increase, acting like built-in decoration without additional styling. At smaller sizes the inline may visually soften and the handmade wobble can dominate, so it is best treated as a display face rather than a text workhorse.