Distressed Opgis 15 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, packaging, headlines, stickers, grunge, handmade, edgy, raw, energetic, add texture, signal diy, create urgency, look worn, rough, ragged, inked, textured, uneven.
A rough, slanted, marker-like style with irregular, broken edges and a visibly textured stroke. Letterforms are loosely constructed and slightly variable in width, giving lines of text a lively, uneven rhythm. Terminals often look blunted or torn, and curves show wobble and speckled contouring that mimics imperfect inking or worn printing. Numerals and capitals maintain clear silhouettes, but the overall finish stays intentionally rugged rather than crisp.
Well-suited for display typography where texture is a feature: posters, cover art, event promotions, and punchy headlines. It can also work for branding accents on packaging or merchandise where a handmade, worn-in look supports the concept. For body copy, it’s best used sparingly or at larger sizes to preserve the distressed details and maintain readability.
The font projects a gritty, handmade attitude—casual, rebellious, and a bit chaotic. Its rough texture and forward lean suggest urgency and motion, evoking DIY posters, band flyers, and street-level graphics rather than polished corporate typography.
The design appears intended to deliver a deliberately imperfect, ink-roughened handwritten feel with strong movement and personality. Its distressed contours and inconsistent stroke behavior prioritize character and atmosphere over refinement, aiming for a bold, lived-in impression.
In longer text settings the texture becomes a dominant feature, creating strong color on the page and a distinctly distressed voice. The irregular outlines and varying stroke density add personality at display sizes, while finer details may visually merge at very small sizes or in low-resolution reproduction.