Wacky Irlu 11 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, halloween, titles, packaging, stickers, spooky, playful, slimy, comic, chaotic, thematic display, horror parody, ink-drip effect, attention grab, handmade feel, dripping, blobby, rounded, hand-drawn, inked.
A heavy, rounded display face with an irregular, blobby silhouette and frequent drip-like terminals that hang below the baseline. Strokes are mostly monoline with gently swelling joins, and counters tend to be small to medium, keeping the texture dense and inky. Proportions vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, with uneven widths and quirky internal shapes, giving the alphabet a hand-rendered, organic rhythm. Edges are soft rather than sharp, and several characters incorporate exaggerated descenders and bulbous bowls that read clearly at larger sizes.
Best suited to short, high-impact display settings where the drippy silhouette can be appreciated—posters, event graphics, seasonal/Halloween promotions, title cards, and playful packaging or labels. It also works well for comics, game UI headers, and social graphics where a humorous “slime/ooze” texture supports the theme.
The dripping details and gooey forms convey a spooky, mischievous tone with a strong B-movie horror and Halloween vibe. At the same time, the rounded construction and bouncy irregularity keep it lighthearted and cartoony rather than threatening. Overall it feels theatrical, humorous, and intentionally messy in a fun way.
The design appears intended to deliver an instantly recognizable ooze/drip effect while staying legible through simple, rounded skeletons and bold massing. Its irregular widths and hand-drawn quirks prioritize character and theme over typographic neutrality, aiming for memorable, decorative headlines.
The distinctive drip terminals create a strong bottom-weighted silhouette and a lively baseline, which becomes part of the font’s personality in headlines. Numerals and capitals match the same inky, goo-drip motif, helping mixed-case settings feel consistent and intentionally decorative.