Print Fomib 1 is a light, narrow, high contrast, reverse italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, book covers, comics, packaging, quirky, playful, scratchy, expressive, casual, hand-lettered feel, casual display, expressive texture, brushy, spiky, jagged, organic, uneven.
A lively, hand-drawn print face with lean proportions, irregular stroke edges, and strong thick–thin modulation that mimics a lightly loaded brush or marker. Letterforms are unconnected and loosely constructed, with variable baseline behavior and inconsistent widths that create a rhythmic, improvised texture. Terminals often taper to sharp points or small flares, and curves look slightly angular, as if formed with quick wrist turns rather than smooth geometry. Uppercase and lowercase share a similar handwritten logic, and numerals keep the same sketchy, tapered stroke character.
Best suited to short display settings where character is more important than uniform texture—posters, punchy headlines, cover titling, comic-style captions, and playful packaging. It can also work for quotes or callouts when set with generous size and spacing to preserve the delicate strokes.
The overall tone feels informal and energetic, with a slightly mischievous, doodled quality. Its unevenness reads as human and spontaneous, lending warmth and personality over polish.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of quick hand lettering—imperfect, animated, and slightly edgy—while remaining readable as a print-style handwritten alphabet.
Some glyphs show deliberate idiosyncrasies—open loops, exaggerated hooks, and occasional wobble in verticals—that enhance the handmade feel. At smaller sizes the fine hairlines and jagged details may visually break up, while at display sizes the expressive stroke variation becomes a key feature.