Print Ugnaf 2 is a regular weight, narrow, very high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, greeting cards, book covers, posters, packaging, playful, whimsical, handmade, friendly, storybook, hand-lettered charm, playful display, personal tone, decorative readability, monoline-like, ball terminals, loopy ascenders, airy counters, bouncy baseline.
A lively handwritten print with tall, narrow proportions and pronounced stroke modulation that shifts between fine hairlines and fuller downstrokes. Stems are generally straight and upright, while bowls and joins stay soft and rounded, often finishing in small ball terminals or tapered flicks. Spacing is a bit irregular in a natural way, and the rhythm feels bouncy thanks to varied widths and occasional exaggerated ascenders/descenders. The lowercase shows compact bodies with relatively tall extenders, and the numerals follow the same informal, drawn-in-ink character with open curves and delicate entry strokes.
Best suited to short to medium display text where its contrast and handwritten irregularities can remain clear—titles, quotes, invitations, greeting cards, and boutique packaging. It can also work for playful branding accents and social graphics, especially when set with comfortable tracking and generous line spacing.
The overall tone is cheerful and lightly quirky, with a casual, hand-drawn charm that reads as personal and approachable. Its delicate hairlines and loopy details add a touch of whimsy, giving it a gentle, storybook flavor rather than a strict or technical voice.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, confident hand lettering—informal and expressive, but still tidy enough to function as a readable display face. Its narrow build and tall extenders suggest an aim for elegant verticality while keeping the overall mood light and personable.
Distinctive curled terminals appear in several letters, and the cap set mixes simple geometric gestures with more expressive, brushy curves. The contrast and thin connecting strokes can look especially refined at larger sizes, where the drawn texture and terminal shapes are easiest to appreciate.