Print Hurot 2 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, logos, social media, dynamic, playful, punchy, casual, energetic, handmade feel, high impact, expressive texture, casual emphasis, brushy, ragged, slanted, heavy, jagged.
A bold, slanted display face with brush-like construction and visibly irregular edges. Strokes are thick and relatively even in weight, with tapered terminals and occasional sharp, chiseled-looking cuts that create a rugged texture. Letterforms lean forward with a lively rhythm and slightly inconsistent stroke endings, reinforcing a hand-made feel. Counters are generally open and rounded, while diagonals and joins show angular, broken-brush artifacts; overall spacing feels natural rather than strictly uniform, aiding the informal flow in words and lines.
Works well for posters, bold headlines, short blurbs, and social graphics where an expressive, hand-drawn emphasis is desired. It also suits branding accents on packaging or labels, especially for products or events that benefit from a punchy, casual voice. For longer passages, larger sizes and generous line spacing help preserve clarity while keeping the textured character.
The tone is energetic and informal, combining a confident, headline-ready weight with a lively, hand-rendered attitude. Its forward slant and rough stroke endings suggest motion and spontaneity, giving text a bold, attention-grabbing personality that reads as playful rather than formal.
The design appears intended to deliver a strong, display-oriented handwritten look—capturing the immediacy of a quick brush stroke while staying cohesive enough for impactful wordmarks and headline typography. The forward slant and rough terminals seem purposeful, aiming to communicate speed, energy, and informal confidence.
In continuous text the irregular edges add strong texture, so it tends to read best at larger sizes where the roughness becomes a stylistic detail rather than visual noise. The numerals match the same brushy, cut-terminal style, maintaining consistency across mixed alphanumeric settings.