Print Yakub 10 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, social media, merchandise, energetic, handmade, casual, playful, expressive, handmade feel, quick marker, friendly tone, display impact, casual clarity, brushy, textured, bouncy, organic, rustic.
A lively, hand-rendered print face with a bold, brush-pen presence and visibly textured stroke edges. Letterforms lean slightly and vary in width, producing a natural, uneven rhythm typical of quick marker writing. Strokes show medium contrast from pressure changes, with rounded terminals, occasional tapering, and subtle wobble that keeps the baseline and curves feeling human. Counters are generally open and generous, while joins and diagonals (notably in K, R, and X) read as brisk, gestural strokes rather than engineered geometry.
Best suited to display roles where its brush texture and handmade rhythm can be appreciated—posters, short headlines, packaging callouts, and social graphics. It also fits labels, stickers, merchandise, and casual branding where an approachable, craft-forward feel is desired. For longer text, it works most comfortably in short bursts (taglines, pull quotes) with ample leading and tracking.
The overall tone is casual and energetic, with a friendly, spontaneous voice that feels like handwritten signage or a sketchbook note. Its irregularities and ink-like texture add warmth and personality, leaning playful rather than formal. The slightly slanted, punchy shapes suggest motion and immediacy—more “written in the moment” than carefully scripted.
The design appears intended to capture the look of bold marker lettering: fast, confident strokes with natural pressure variation and imperfect edges. It prioritizes personality and immediacy over strict uniformity, aiming for an informal, human tone that reads clearly while still looking distinctly hand-made.
Uppercase forms present as chunky and emphatic, while lowercase stays simple and compact, maintaining an informal print style rather than connected script. Numerals share the same brush texture and handwritten quirks, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive. The texture and strong strokes can build character at larger sizes, while tight spacing and irregular widths may require a bit of breathing room for longer passages.