Print Faray 4 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, halloween, event flyers, spooky, rugged, playful, grungy, folk, handmade texture, horror vibe, display impact, playful grit, distressed, rough-edged, chunky, brushy, poster-like.
A chunky, hand-rendered print face with compact proportions and heavy, irregular strokes. Letterforms are built from broad, brush-like masses with visibly rough, torn-looking edges and uneven terminals, creating a distressed silhouette. Counters are relatively small and shapes are simplified, with occasional asymmetry and slight baseline wobble that reinforce the drawn-by-hand rhythm. The overall texture is consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals, giving lines of text a dense, inky color.
Best suited to display settings where texture and personality are assets: posters, headlines, event flyers, themed promotions, and packaging. It performs especially well for spooky or seasonal applications, as well as playful entertainment branding that needs a rough, handmade punch. For longer copy, larger sizes and looser spacing help maintain clarity.
The font reads as spooky and mischievous, with a gritty, handmade energy. Its rough contours suggest horror and Halloween cues while staying cartoonish enough to feel playful rather than grim. The overall tone is bold, attention-grabbing, and slightly chaotic.
The design appears intended to mimic bold, hand-painted or stamped lettering with deliberate distressing, delivering instant character and a tactile, inked presence. It prioritizes impact and mood over typographic neutrality, aiming for expressive, theme-forward display use.
Caps are tall and monolithic with blunt serifs or spur-like flicks, while lowercase remains sturdy and compact, maintaining strong presence at display sizes. Numerals follow the same distressed logic, with simplified forms that prioritize impact over precision. The texture is prominent, so the face benefits from generous tracking and moderate line spacing to keep counters from filling in visually.