Print Firom 1 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, horror titles, event flyers, game ui, raw, grungy, spooky, punk, handmade, distressed look, diy energy, dramatic titles, analog texture, edgy branding, brushy, ragged, textured, irregular, jagged.
A rough, hand-rendered print face with brush-like strokes and visibly distressed edges. Letterforms are compact and slightly right-leaning, with irregular stroke terminals, torn-looking contours, and uneven internal counters that create a jittery rhythm. The capitals are tall and assertive, while the lowercase shows simplified, punchy shapes with occasional exaggerated descenders and inconsistent widths that reinforce the handmade texture. Numerals match the same rugged construction, with wobble and ink-break artifacts echoed across the set.
Best suited to display settings where the distressed texture can read clearly—posters, album covers, packaging accents, or title cards for horror, thriller, and punk-themed projects. It can also work for short UI labels or headers in games and zines when a gritty, handmade voice is desired.
The overall tone is gritty and confrontational, with a dark, horror-adjacent energy that feels like painted signage or hand-inked lettering. Its rough texture and uneven cadence read as rebellious, scrappy, and intentionally imperfect, lending a sense of urgency and attitude.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, dry-brush hand lettering with deliberate wear and torn edges, prioritizing mood and impact over uniformity. It aims to deliver a rough, analog feel that suggests DIY printing, ink drag, and imperfect application.
The texture is a primary feature: edges appear chipped and dry-brushed, producing lively silhouette noise that becomes more prominent at larger sizes. Spacing and shape irregularities contribute to character, but also make long passages feel busy compared to cleaner display faces.