Solid Eggi 2 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, children’s, stickers, playful, quirky, handmade, whimsical, retro, standout texture, handmade feel, playful branding, quirky display, rounded, blobby, soft, wobbly, chunky.
A narrow, irregular display face with soft, swollen strokes and noticeably uneven contours that feel hand-formed. Letterforms are built from simplified, chunky silhouettes with occasional collapsed counters and teardrop-like terminals, creating a solid, inked-in look. Curves dominate and corners are broadly rounded; verticals stay mostly straight but wobble slightly, giving an organic rhythm. Spacing and widths vary from glyph to glyph, and the overall texture reads bold and spotty, with some characters appearing more filled or bulbous than others.
Best suited for short display settings such as posters, splashy headlines, packaging, labels, and playful merchandising where a strong silhouette is desirable. It can work well for kids-oriented materials, quirky event branding, or informal social graphics, especially at larger sizes where its irregular rhythm becomes a feature.
The tone is playful and eccentric, like a cartoonish marker or cut-paper alphabet. Its uneven fill and lumpy curves create a friendly, offbeat personality that feels informal and intentionally imperfect. The solid interiors add a slightly spooky or mysterious edge, while the overall forms remain lighthearted rather than aggressive.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, handcrafted novelty voice with an intentionally imperfect, filled-in silhouette. By collapsing some interior spaces and emphasizing blobby terminals, it prioritizes distinctive texture and character over strict typographic regularity.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent soft, blotted construction, and the figures follow the same narrow, rounded logic. Because counters can be minimized or closed, legibility depends on size and context; the face performs best when allowed to read as shape and texture rather than fine detail.