Print Ugduj 2 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, packaging, posters, greeting cards, social media, casual, friendly, playful, handmade, approachable, handmade charm, casual legibility, space saving, playful tone, rounded, monoline, compact, loose, bouncy.
A compact, hand-drawn print face with rounded forms and a lightly bouncing baseline. Strokes read mostly monoline with subtle pressure variation and soft, slightly irregular terminals that mimic marker or felt-tip movement. Counters are open and simplified, with tall, narrow capitals and relatively small lowercase bodies; ascenders and descenders are prominent, helping separation in tight spacing. Overall rhythm is lively and inconsistent in a natural way, with gently varied stroke joins and occasional asymmetry that reinforces a handwritten feel.
Works well for short headlines, packaging callouts, posters, greeting cards, and casual branding where a friendly handmade tone is desired. It also suits social media graphics and light editorial pull quotes, especially when space is limited and a compact handwritten texture is useful.
The font conveys an easygoing, personable tone—more like quick, neat note-taking than polished calligraphy. Its narrow, upbeat letterforms feel youthful and informal, lending a chatty, human presence without becoming messy or overly decorative.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-printed lettering—quick, legible, and expressive—while maintaining enough consistency for repeated use in display settings. Its proportions and simplified shapes suggest an emphasis on charm and space efficiency over formal precision.
Capitals are clean and simple, while lowercase letters lean toward single-storey, note-like constructions that keep the texture light. Numerals are rounded and informal, matching the alphabet’s soft terminals and compact proportions. In longer text, the tight width creates a dense, energetic texture best suited to short bursts rather than extended reading.