Print Edgim 6 is a regular weight, very narrow, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween promos, posters, book covers, album art, spooky, macabre, witchy, grunge, handmade, evoke horror, add texture, handmade feel, retro poster, condensed, ragged, wobbly, scratchy, uneven baseline.
A condensed, hand-drawn display face with tall, narrow proportions and irregular, ink-like strokes. Letterforms show gently wavering verticals, slightly inconsistent stroke edges, and occasional swelling or pinching that reads like marker or brush on paper. Terminals are blunt and sometimes frayed, counters are small and slightly uneven, and spacing varies from glyph to glyph, creating a jittery rhythm while remaining broadly legible. Numerals follow the same narrow, elongated construction with a similarly roughened outline.
Best suited for short headlines and display settings where atmosphere matters—horror and Halloween promotions, event posters, book or comic covers, game titles, and themed packaging. It can also work for pull quotes or labels when used with generous tracking and ample size to preserve the rough details.
The overall tone feels eerie and theatrical—suggesting vintage horror ephemera, haunted-house signage, or occult-inspired lettering. Its nervous texture and compressed forms create tension and a handmade grit that reads as intentionally unsettling rather than polished or neutral.
The design appears intended to deliver a narrow, hand-rendered display voice with a controlled but imperfect texture—prioritizing mood and character over typographic neutrality. The compressed proportions and scratchy edges seem crafted to evoke unsettling, vintage-printed or hand-lettered signage in a readable, repeatable font.
Capitals are especially tall and dominant, lending a poster-like vertical emphasis, while lowercase forms retain a simple, print-like construction without connecting strokes. The texture is consistent across the set, giving a cohesive “drawn in one sitting” feel despite the deliberate irregularities.