Print Yalal 7 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, horror titles, album covers, game ui, packaging, spooky, grunge, handmade, edgy, playful, distressed look, handmade feel, horror mood, display impact, raw texture, rough, ragged, brushy, jagged, textured.
This font uses rough, brush-like strokes with visibly irregular edges and occasional ink-break texture, creating a deliberately distressed silhouette. Letterforms are generally upright and compact, with narrow proportions and uneven stroke terminals that taper or fray as if drawn quickly with a dry brush. Curves are slightly lumpy rather than geometric, and straight stems show subtle waviness, producing a lively, hand-rendered rhythm across words. Counters stay fairly open for the style, while diagonals and joins can pinch or flare, enhancing the organic, imperfect finish.
It works best for short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, title cards, and branding moments where a gritty handmade feel is desired. The distressed brush texture also suits entertainment contexts like horror or thriller graphics, game menus, and event promos, as well as packaging or labels that benefit from an intentionally rough, handcrafted tone.
The overall tone feels spooky and gritty, with a playful horror-comic energy. Its scratchy texture and uneven stroke endings suggest urgency and attitude, making the voice feel handmade, rebellious, and a little chaotic rather than polished or refined.
The design appears intended to mimic quick hand-painted or marker-brushed lettering with a worn, scratchy edge, prioritizing character and atmosphere over typographic smoothness. Its consistent distress and compact shapes suggest a display-oriented font built to inject tension, grit, and handmade immediacy into headings and logos.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same distressed construction, maintaining a consistent roughness across the set. Numerals follow the same brush treatment with irregular curves and terminals, helping mixed alphanumeric settings feel cohesive. The texture is strong enough to read as intentional distress even at larger sizes, but it may appear busy in dense blocks of small text.