Print Funod 8 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album covers, horror comedy, event flyers, gritty, playful, spooky, handmade, rowdy, expressiveness, attention-grab, handmade texture, quirky mood, bold legibility, jagged, chunky, rough-cut, inked, irregular.
A chunky, hand-drawn display face with irregular, chiseled-looking contours and a noticeably uneven baseline rhythm. Strokes are heavy and mostly monoline in feel, but edges wobble and corners break into angular facets, creating a torn-paper or carved silhouette. Counters are compact and sometimes pinched, with simplified interior shapes that keep the overall color dense. Uppercase forms feel blocky and assertive, while lowercase maintains the same rugged texture with slightly narrower, more upright constructions and occasional quirky terminals.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings where texture and personality are an asset: posters, headlines, flyers, and bold packaging or merch graphics. It also fits spooky-but-fun themes such as Halloween promotions, punk/garage aesthetics, and comic-horror titling. For long passages, the dense color and irregular edges may feel heavy, so larger sizes and generous line spacing will help.
The font projects a bold, mischievous energy that reads as rough-and-ready rather than refined. Its jagged texture and exaggerated mass give it a slightly eerie, comic-horror tone, while the informal letterforms keep it friendly and handmade. Overall it feels like hand-cut lettering made for attention-grabbing messages.
The design appears intended to emulate expressive hand-cut or roughly inked lettering with a deliberately imperfect outline. It prioritizes attitude and immediacy over polish, aiming to deliver a strong silhouette that stays readable while feeling raw and energetic.
Spacing appears intentionally uneven, contributing to a lively, improvised rhythm in text. The numerals match the same faceted, cutout style, staying legible but strongly stylized, especially in rounded figures like 0, 6, 8, and 9.