Print Usmof 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, invitations, education, packaging, friendly, casual, playful, approachable, handmade, informality, warmth, readability, personality, everyday, rounded terminals, hand-drawn, marker-like, soft edges, slightly bouncy.
The letterforms are unconnected and hand-drawn, with smooth, rounded terminals and subtly uneven stroke edges that suggest marker or brush-pen texture. Strokes stay fairly consistent in thickness, and the overall rhythm is slightly bouncy, with small variations in width and internal counters from glyph to glyph. Uppercase shapes are simple and open, while lowercase forms lean toward printed handwriting with compact bowls and modest ascenders/descenders. Numerals follow the same informal construction, with rounded curves and occasional tapering at stroke ends.
This font works well for informal headlines, short paragraphs, and friendly messaging where a human, personal tone is desirable. It suits invitations, classroom and educational materials, children-oriented packaging, craft and DIY branding, social graphics, and note-like UI labels. It can also be effective for quotes and callouts where you want warmth without cursive connectivity.
This font conveys a friendly, casual tone with a lightly playful, homemade feel. Its steady upright stance keeps it approachable rather than whimsical, making it feel like neat handwriting meant to be read. The irregularities add warmth and personality without turning messy or chaotic.
The design appears intended to mimic tidy, everyday handwriting in a consistent, font-ready system. It prioritizes an easygoing, human feel through small irregularities and rounded finishing while keeping forms clear enough for continuous reading. The overall construction suggests a practical “handwritten print” voice suited to casual communication.
Spacing appears moderately open with lively, handwritten sidebearings, and the sample text maintains good legibility despite natural variation. The ampersand and punctuation share the same rounded, drawn character, helping mixed-content lines (text plus numerals) feel cohesive.