Print Aflih 2 is a regular weight, narrow, low contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: branding, packaging, posters, social media, greeting cards, casual, friendly, lively, personal, easygoing, handwritten feel, approachability, informal tone, lively rhythm, brushed, monoline, rounded, slanted, loopy.
A casual handwritten print with a consistent rightward slant and smooth, brush-like strokes. Letterforms are predominantly monoline with softly rounded terminals and gentle swelling at curves, giving the outlines a fluid, drawn-in-one-pass feel. Proportions are compact and tall-leaning, with modest counters and a relatively restrained x-height compared to the ascenders; spacing stays readable but keeps an informal rhythm. Several shapes include simple loops and open apertures, and the numerals follow the same easy, handwritten construction.
Works well for branding accents, packaging labels, posters, and social media graphics where an informal, personal voice is desired. It also suits invitations, greeting cards, and pull quotes, especially when used at medium to large sizes where the handwritten movement reads clearly. For longer passages, it is best as a secondary voice rather than the primary text face.
The overall tone is warm and approachable, like quick note-taking with a confident hand. Its slant and flowing joins within individual letters add energy and momentum, while the soft terminals keep it friendly rather than edgy. The result feels informal and human, suited to conversational, upbeat messaging.
Designed to capture an everyday handwritten note aesthetic with consistent slant, smooth stroke flow, and straightforward, readable letterforms. The emphasis appears to be on friendly immediacy and natural rhythm rather than strict geometric consistency, making it feel human and spontaneous while staying coherent across the alphabet and numerals.
Capitals are simple and legible with a slightly script-like motion, while lowercase forms lean more obviously into handwritten gestures, including occasional looped descenders. Stroke endings often taper subtly, reinforcing a pen/brush impression without becoming high-contrast or calligraphic. The sample text shows good word-shape clarity at display and short-text sizes, with a distinctly personal cadence across lines.