Print Mobok 2 is a light, very wide, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, quotes, social graphics, casual, expressive, playful, handmade, airy, handmade feel, energetic display, casual personality, brush texture, brushy, calligraphic, scratchy, loose, angular.
A brisk handwritten print with a slanted, brush-pen feel and noticeably varied stroke pressure. Letterforms are open and loosely constructed, with quick entry/exit strokes, tapered terminals, and occasional ink-like blobs where strokes start or stop. Proportions lean wide with generous horizontal motion; curves are slightly squashed while diagonals and cross-strokes add a lively, sketchy rhythm. Caps are larger and more performative than the lowercase, and figures keep the same informal, hand-drawn character with uneven widths and subtle baseline wobble.
Best suited to display settings where a handmade tone is desirable: posters, packaging callouts, short quotes, and social or editorial graphics. It can add personality to titles and subheads, especially at medium to large sizes where the tapered strokes and textured terminals have room to breathe.
The overall tone is informal and energetic, like fast marker lettering on a poster or notebook page. It reads friendly and a bit mischievous, with enough motion and texture to feel personal rather than polished. The contrasty brush behavior adds a dramatic flick to headings while still keeping an approachable, human voice.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand lettering with brush-like pressure changes and a casual print structure. Its wide stance and animated stroke endings prioritize personality and motion over strict regularity, aiming for an expressive, approachable display voice.
Spacing and stroke endings feel intentionally irregular, which enhances authenticity but also makes long passages look busy. Distinctive capitals and sweeping forms (notably rounded letters and diagonals) create strong word shapes, while some joins and counters stay intentionally loose for a drawn-on-paper effect.