Print Tumet 10 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, book covers, event promos, playful, spooky, quirky, whimsical, folkloric, expressiveness, handmade feel, theatrical impact, seasonal flavor, angular, chiseled, swashy, brushed, rough-cut.
A heavy, hand-drawn display face with compact proportions and energetic, uneven rhythm. Strokes show strong thick–thin modulation with pointed terminals, wedge-like joins, and frequent sharp diagonals that create a carved or brush-cut silhouette. Curves are often flattened or faceted, counters are irregular, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, illustrative texture. The lowercase includes distinctive, sometimes swashy shapes (notably in letters like g, y, and z), with diamond-like dots on i/j and a generally tight, bold color on the line.
Best suited to short-to-medium display settings where texture and personality are desired—posters, headlines, book or game titles, seasonal/event promotions, and characterful packaging. It works well when set large, where the chiseled details and contrast can read clearly and contribute to an illustrative tone.
The letterforms feel mischievous and theatrical, blending storybook charm with a slightly eerie, Halloween-adjacent edge. Its jagged corners and knife-cut terminals give it a dramatic, handmade personality that reads more like lettering than neutral type.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, hand-crafted look with dramatic contrast and pointed, carved terminals, evoking informal sign lettering and stylized, story-driven branding. Its deliberate irregularities suggest it was drawn to feel lively and expressive rather than mechanically consistent.
Spacing appears relatively tight in text, producing a dense, poster-like block; the irregular sidebearings and variable widths add bounce but can reduce clarity at smaller sizes. Numerals follow the same cut, high-contrast logic, with expressive curves and sharp entry/exit strokes that prioritize character over uniformity.