Print Virub 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, greeting cards, children’s media, quirky, handmade, playful, whimsical, friendly, handmade feel, friendly tone, space saving, casual display, quirky personality, condensed, tall, bouncy, organic, monoline-ish.
A tall, condensed handwritten print with lightly irregular stroke edges and a drawn-by-hand steadiness. The forms favor narrow bowls and long verticals, with subtle tapering at terminals and occasional flick-like entry/exit strokes that hint at pen pressure. Curves are softly asymmetric, counters are compact, and overall spacing feels rhythmically uneven in an intentional, human way. Capitals are slender and prominent, while lowercase remains simple and legible, keeping a consistent, lightly textured line across words.
Best suited to display settings where a handmade voice is desired—headlines, short blurbs, posters, packaging callouts, greeting cards, and playful branding. It can also work for captions or UI accents when kept to moderate lengths, benefiting from generous line spacing to preserve its narrow, tall rhythm.
The font reads as casual and personable, with a slightly eccentric charm. Its narrow, lofty proportions create an animated, storybook-like tone that feels approachable rather than formal. The mild irregularities and tapered endings add warmth and a hand-crafted sincerity.
Likely designed to capture the immediacy of neat hand lettering in a condensed footprint, balancing legibility with character. The goal appears to be a friendly, informal print style that stands out through verticality, subtle tapering, and humanized consistency across the alphabet and figures.
The condensed set width makes lines of text feel airy while still conserving horizontal space. Rounded letters (like o/c/e) stay compact, and straighter letters lean into elongated stems, producing a distinctive vertical cadence. Numerals follow the same narrow, hand-drawn logic, suitable for informal labels and lightweight display use.