Print Imkoj 5 is a bold, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, game ui, rustic, quirky, gritty, handmade, medieval, handmade texture, rustic branding, themed display, expressive titling, angular, chiseled, textured, irregular, spiky.
A compact, hand-drawn display face with dense black strokes and an uneven, inked texture. Letterforms are narrow and predominantly vertical, with angular corners, wedge-like terminals, and occasional sharp notches that suggest a carved or brush-cut tool. Curves are simplified into faceted shapes, counters tend to be tight, and the overall rhythm is intentionally irregular, giving the line a lively, jittered cadence. Numerals follow the same rugged construction, with pointed joins and slightly inconsistent widths that reinforce the handcrafted feel.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where texture and personality are assets: headlines, posters, packaging, and cover titling. It can also work for themed interfaces or labels that want a rugged, handcrafted voice. For long passages or small sizes, the dense stroke weight and tight counters may reduce clarity, so generous sizing and spacing help.
The font reads as earthy and characterful, combining a rough handmade energy with a faintly archaic, storybook tone. Its spiky edges and textured fill add grit and attitude, while the narrow proportions keep it punchy and urgent. Overall it feels playful in a dark, rustic way rather than polished or delicate.
The design appears intended to mimic informal, hand-rendered lettering with a rough tool or brush edge, prioritizing character and texture over uniformity. Its narrow build and angular detailing aim to deliver a bold, attention-grabbing tone that feels handmade and slightly archaic.
In the sample text, the condensed shapes and tight counters create strong color and compact word silhouettes, while the irregular stroke edges remain clearly visible at display sizes. The mix of sharp diagonals and faceted bowls gives many letters a pseudo-chiseled personality, and the uneven baseline/sidebearings contribute to a natural, hand-set look.