Print Engab 4 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, album art, event promo, brushy, energetic, casual, expressive, raw, hand-painted feel, high impact, human warmth, spontaneous rhythm, textured, dry-brush, gestural, slanted, rough-edged.
A lively brush-script style with a consistent rightward slant and visibly hand-driven stroke behavior. Strokes are broad and somewhat wedge-like, with rough, dry-brush edges and occasional ink breakup that creates a textured silhouette. Letterforms are compact with a relatively small x-height and prominent ascenders/descenders, and spacing is irregular in a natural way, giving the line a bouncy rhythm. Capitals read as bold, simplified brush gestures rather than formal calligraphic constructions, and numerals follow the same painted, slightly uneven finish.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, promotions, packaging callouts, and expressive headlines where the brush texture can be appreciated. It can also work for album art or social graphics when a fast, hand-painted voice is desired, but it is less ideal for long reading passages or small UI text due to its textured edges and compact inner spaces.
The font conveys an informal, energetic tone—like quick lettering made with a loaded brush marker. Its texture and imperfect edges add a handmade sincerity and a slightly gritty, street-poster attitude, while the consistent slant keeps it dynamic and forward-moving.
The design appears intended to capture quick, hand-painted lettering with a dry-brush finish—prioritizing gesture, speed, and personality over typographic regularity. It aims to deliver a confident, informal script presence that feels human and immediate in display settings.
At larger sizes the dry-brush texture becomes a key feature, while at smaller sizes the rough edges and tight counters can make details feel more compact. The sample text shows strong word-shape momentum and a deliberately uneven baseline/letterspacing feel that emphasizes spontaneity over precision.