Could you explain where these numbers come from?
I understand Vdc = Vac * sqrt(2). And the C Calc based on Mains Frequency. Where did 0.62 come from? 1/sqrt(2) is ~0.707. I'm confused.
Well, the capacitance formula is a simplified one which works pretty good with bridge rectifiers, based on the basic equation for a capacitor I = C * dv/dt
dv/dt just means the rate of change of the voltage, measured in volts/second. You know the maximum current I (he wants 2A), and you should choose a value for dv/dt that keeps the voltage high enough for your circuit to run in between peaks.
For example, if you can afford to lose two volts, and your capacitor is being charged 100 times per second (full-wave rectification at 50 Hz), then the rate of change is 2V*100Hz = 200V/s. Then just solve for C:
2 = C * 200V/s => C = 2/200 = 0.01 = 10.000 uF
3.5v = C *200 => C = 2/350 = 0.0057 = 5700uF
The 0.7 factor I added just makes the value more realistic but it never hurts to add more capacitance than the determined value.
As for the voltage and amps of transformer... it's pretty obvious ... if the transformer is rated for a particular VA number, you won't have the same DC current as the AC current, the voltage changes.
24 v AC @ 60 VA ... 60/24 = 2.5A ... 24x1.414 = 33.93v ... 60va/33.9v = 1.77A ... but a much safer current value is by multiplying the current with 0.62-0.65, which gets you about 1.6A
Now of course, that 0.62 is for bridge rectifier - you can get DC in different ways, using 2 diodes, or using inductors, it depends on your transformer and your needs, see attached picture: