Print Forek 14 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, event promos, playful, rugged, handmade, casual, grunge, handmade feel, rugged texture, high impact, casual friendliness, brushy, textured, chunky, rounded, irregular.
A heavy, hand-drawn print style with chunky, rounded silhouettes and visibly irregular contours. Strokes are largely monoline in feel, but edges show dry-brush texture and small nicks that create a rough, inked-in look. Counters are generous and mostly open, helping the dense shapes stay readable, while widths and terminals vary slightly from letter to letter for an organic rhythm. The overall construction is simple and blocky rather than calligraphic, with a consistent upright stance and a deliberately imperfect finish.
Best suited for short bursts of text such as posters, headlines, product labels, and promotional graphics where a handmade, roughened voice is desirable. It also works well for children’s or hobby-themed materials, casual signage, and social media graphics that benefit from a bold, tactile presence. For longer paragraphs, it will be most effective when set with generous size and spacing to keep the textured edges from crowding.
The font reads as playful and energetic, with a scrappy, DIY personality. Its roughened edges and blunt forms give it a mischievous, slightly rebellious tone—more street-poster than polished branding. The mood is friendly and informal, leaning toward comic, craft, and handmade aesthetics.
The design appears intended to mimic thick marker or brush lettering with a dry, textured edge, prioritizing personality and impact over geometric precision. Its consistent, simplified letterforms aim for quick readability while preserving the spontaneity of hand-rendered strokes.
The texture is strong enough to become a defining feature at larger sizes, where the ragged terminals and brush chatter are clearly visible. At smaller sizes, the same texture may visually fill in fine details, so spacing and size choice will matter for clarity—especially in tight lines of text.