Print Pame 2 is a regular weight, normal width, high contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, social graphics, packaging, youth branding, quotes, casual, playful, sketchy, energetic, friendly, handmade feel, informal voice, expressive texture, quick lettering, approachable tone, brushy, textured, marker-like, rounded, organic.
A lively, right-slanted handwritten print with brush/marker-like strokes and visible texture. Letterforms are loosely constructed with rounded counters and soft terminals, while stroke edges show slight wobble and layered inking that creates an intentionally imperfect, sketchy finish. Proportions are informal and slightly variable from glyph to glyph, with open shapes and generous curves that keep the texture from clogging at typical text sizes. Overall spacing feels relaxed and natural, reinforcing the hand-drawn rhythm.
This font works best for display and short-to-medium copy where a handcrafted feel is desirable: posters, social media graphics, packaging callouts, informal branding, and quote or slogan treatments. It can also suit headings in educational or lifestyle contexts where friendliness and energy matter more than strict typographic regularity.
The tone is informal and upbeat, conveying a personal, handmade voice rather than a polished corporate feel. Its textured strokes and animated slant suggest spontaneity and motion, making it feel approachable and a bit cheeky—well suited to messaging that benefits from warmth and human character.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick brush lettering in a printable, unconnected style—combining an italic lean, textured stroke buildup, and relaxed proportions to deliver an expressive, human-made look that stays broadly legible in use.
Capitals read bold and expressive with simplified, rounded construction, while lowercase maintains legibility through open apertures and clear differentiation of forms. The numerals share the same scribbly texture and slightly uneven stroke buildup, helping mixed-content lines look cohesive. In longer sample text, the consistent forward lean and broad curves support a smooth reading flow despite the intentionally roughened outlines.