Print Farib 5 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, event flyers, packaging, playful, spooky, punk, retro, handmade, attention, handmade feel, grit, character, rough-edged, inked, distressed, bouncy, irregular.
A heavy, hand-drawn display face with irregular outlines and a dry-brush/inked texture that leaves small nicks and jagged edges. Strokes are chunky with subtly fluctuating thickness, and many terminals end in blunt, torn-looking cuts rather than crisp corners. The overall construction is compact and upright-leaning in feel, with uneven widths and a slightly wobbly baseline that creates a lively, organic rhythm across words. Counters are relatively small and sometimes asymmetrical, reinforcing the gritty, drawn-by-hand character.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where texture is a feature—posters, flyers, cover art, and branded headlines. It can also work on packaging or labels when a gritty, handcrafted tone is desired, but the distressed edges and tight counters suggest using it at larger sizes for clarity.
The texture and uneven rhythm give it a mischievous, slightly eerie energy—somewhere between DIY gig-poster attitude and Halloween headline theatrics. It reads as bold and attention-grabbing, with a playful roughness that feels energetic rather than refined.
The design appears intended to deliver strong visual punch with a deliberately imperfect, hand-rendered texture. Its irregular contours and animated spacing choices prioritize personality and atmosphere over neutrality, making it a characterful option for expressive display typography.
Uppercase forms are blocky and assertive, while lowercase introduces more quirky silhouettes (notably in rounded letters and the single-storey forms), increasing the handmade feel in running text. Numerals follow the same rugged, cut-paper/brush-mark logic, staying visually consistent with the alphabet.