Print Fokel 1 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, social posts, menus, playful, casual, handmade, friendly, expressive, handmade feel, quick lettering, display impact, casual emphasis, brushy, textured, organic, bouncy, imperfect.
A condensed, right-leaning handwritten print with a brush-pen feel and visibly uneven stroke edges. Forms are compact with tight counters and a lively baseline rhythm, showing small variations in width and stroke pressure from letter to letter. Terminals are often tapered or slightly blunt, and curves are drawn with an organic, slightly wobbly contour that reinforces the hand-rendered texture. Overall spacing is relatively tight, keeping words dense and energetic while remaining readable at display and short-text sizes.
Best suited for display typography where a handmade, energetic voice is desired—posters, packaging, social media graphics, menu boards, invitations, and short branding phrases. It also works for subheads and callouts where a friendly emphasis is needed, while longer body text may benefit from larger sizes and generous line spacing to preserve legibility.
The font conveys an informal, upbeat tone—like quick marker lettering on a menu board or a personal note. Its condensed proportions and lively slant add urgency and momentum, while the soft, brushy shapes keep it approachable and human. The imperfect edges and varied forms suggest spontaneity and personality rather than precision.
The design appears intended to mimic fast, confident brush lettering in an unconnected print style, prioritizing personality and immediacy over strict uniformity. Its condensed build and forward slant suggest it was drawn to deliver impact in limited space while keeping a casual, human feel.
Capitals are punchy and simplified, with a few distinctive, slightly idiosyncratic shapes that add character in headlines. Lowercase maintains a consistent forward motion and compact footprint, and the numerals follow the same brush-drawn logic, making mixed text feel cohesive. The texture becomes a key visual feature, so very small sizes or low-contrast printing may reduce clarity.