Print Pahe 8 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, event flyers, kids projects, playful, spooky, crafty, quirky, bold, handmade feel, expressive display, bold impact, casual signage, marker-like, textured, wobbly, rounded, irregular.
A heavy, hand-drawn print style with chunky strokes and rounded terminals. Letterforms show intentional irregularity in contour and stroke edges, creating a slightly wobbly silhouette and a textured, inked-in feel. Counters tend to be small and uneven, with occasional internal cut-ins and notches that add character. Proportions vary subtly from glyph to glyph, giving the alphabet a lively rhythm while remaining legible in short lines and display settings.
Best suited for display typography such as posters, flyers, titles, and short pull quotes where the bold, handmade texture can be appreciated. It also fits playful packaging, craft branding, and seasonal or themed graphics that benefit from a quirky, slightly spooky voice. For longer passages, it will be most comfortable at larger sizes with generous line spacing.
The overall tone is energetic and mischievous, with a hint of eerie whimsy. Its rough, filled-marker texture and uneven outlines suggest handmade signage, doodles, and comic titling—more expressive than polished. The result feels friendly and crafty, but it can also read as spooky or Halloween-adjacent when set large and tight.
The design appears intended to mimic thick, hand-painted or marker-drawn lettering with visible imperfections and a filled-in texture, prioritizing personality and impact over geometric precision. It aims to provide an instantly expressive, handcrafted look that stands out in headlines and graphic applications.
The texture appears embedded into the shapes rather than coming from a separate effect, producing dark mass with occasional lighter streaks inside strokes. The numerals match the same chunky, hand-rendered logic and work best when treated as part of a bold, informal headline system.