Print Fydy 1 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, horror, album art, comics, event flyers, grunge, playful, spooky, handmade, rough, distress, impact, texture, display, jagged, blobby, chunky, weathered, uneven.
A heavy, inked display face with irregular, hand-drawn contours and noticeably rough edges. Strokes are thick and largely monoline, but their boundaries wobble, creating a torn-paper or stamped-ink texture. Counters are small and often uneven, and curves resolve into lumpy, organic shapes rather than smooth geometry. Spacing and letter widths vary from glyph to glyph, giving the line a lively, slightly unpredictable rhythm while staying generally upright and readable at larger sizes.
Best suited to posters, flyers, and other attention-grabbing display settings where texture and character are desirable. It works well for horror, Halloween, punk/garage aesthetics, comic-style titling, and bold packaging or signage concepts. For longer passages, the tight counters and rugged edges are likely to feel dense, so it’s most effective in short bursts and larger point sizes.
The overall tone feels raw and mischievous, with a gritty, distressed energy that can read as spooky or B-movie dramatic depending on context. Its handmade roughness suggests informality and attitude rather than polish, lending a DIY, underground feel to headlines and short phrases.
The design appears intended to simulate thick hand-rendered lettering with a deliberately distressed edge, prioritizing impact and personality over uniformity. By keeping the construction upright and the silhouettes familiar while introducing heavy texture and width variation, it aims to stay legible as a display face while delivering a gritty, handmade look.
Uppercase forms are blocky and assertive with irregular shoulders and terminals, while lowercase maintains the same rough texture and simplified construction. Numerals match the heavy color and uneven contouring, supporting cohesive set dressing for bold titles and signage-like applications.