Print Ganel 2 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, album art, playful, grungy, handmade, casual, quirky, handmade feel, texture, display impact, casual tone, diy aesthetic, rough edges, blobby, organic, inked, uneven.
A heavy, hand-drawn print style with rounded, blobby forms and noticeably rough, wobbly edges. Strokes are thick and fairly consistent in color, but the outlines show natural irregularities that create a textured, inked look. Letterforms are mostly upright with simplified construction, open counters, and soft corners; proportions and widths vary slightly from glyph to glyph, giving the set an intentionally imperfect rhythm. Spacing reads as loosely even, with a friendly, chunky silhouette that stays legible at display sizes.
Best suited to short headlines, poster titles, packaging callouts, stickers, and other expressive display applications where the rough, handmade edges can be appreciated. It can add personality to playful branding or DIY/event materials, especially when set large or with generous spacing. For small UI text or long reading, the heavy texture and irregularity may reduce clarity compared with cleaner text faces.
The overall tone is playful and messy in a deliberate way, like marker lettering or painted signage with a bit of grit. It feels informal and approachable, with a quirky energy that can skew toward spooky or punk depending on context. The rough contouring adds a tactile, DIY attitude rather than a polished typographic voice.
The design appears intended to mimic casual hand lettering with a thick marker or brush, preserving natural wobble and uneven edges to create character. The goal seems to be immediate impact and an authentic, crafted feel rather than strict geometric consistency.
The texture is driven by edge distortion rather than internal shading, so the letters read as solid black shapes with organic boundaries. Round characters (O, C, G) emphasize the blotted, hand-inked effect, while straight strokes (I, T, L) retain slight waviness that keeps the set cohesive.