Print Agguk 5 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, sports branding, headlines, logotypes, packaging, sporty, dynamic, retro, punchy, edgy, convey speed, grab attention, add energy, retro styling, slanted, angular, compact, chiseled, brushlike.
A slanted, compact display face with sharp, angular terminals and subtly tapered strokes that feel brushed or cut with a quick tool. Letterforms lean forward with energetic rhythm, mixing rounded rectangles (notably in C/O/D) with knife-like diagonals and pointed joins. Counters are relatively tight and apertures are often narrow, while stroke endings alternate between crisp wedges and blunt, squared cuts for a fast, mechanical feel. Overall spacing reads on the tight side, reinforcing a condensed, speed-oriented texture in words and lines.
This font works best in short-to-medium display settings where impact and motion are desirable—posters, headlines, event graphics, and sports-oriented branding. It can also add energy to packaging, apparel graphics, and logo wordmarks, especially when set at larger sizes where the sharp terminals and tight counters remain clear.
The font conveys motion and urgency, with a sporty, competitive tone reminiscent of racing graphics and action headlines. Its sharp slant and assertive terminals give it a bold, slightly aggressive personality that feels energetic rather than formal. The overall mood is retro-leaning and streetwise, suited to attention-grabbing messaging.
The design appears intended to emulate quick, hand-drawn italic signage with a streamlined, speed-focused stance. Its condensed proportions and sharp cuts prioritize punch and directionality, aiming for maximum visual momentum in display typography.
The forms show deliberate irregularity typical of hand-rendered lettering, while still maintaining consistent angles and a cohesive baseline flow. Numerals follow the same forward drive, with compact proportions and angular cuts that keep them visually aligned with the caps and lowercase.