Print Faluk 9 is a bold, normal width, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, album art, event promos, rugged, expressive, handmade, gritty, playful, handmade texture, bold impact, expressive brush, casual display, dry brush, rough edges, ink texture, organic, irregular.
A dry-brushed, hand-rendered print face with visibly textured strokes and ragged contours. Letterforms are built from chunky, high-contrast strokes with tapered terminals and occasional ink breaks that create a worn, organic silhouette. Proportions are lively and inconsistent in a deliberate way, with variable stroke pressure and slightly uneven curves that keep the rhythm energetic while remaining broadly legible. Counters are open and simplified, and the overall spacing feels loose and natural rather than mechanically uniform.
Best suited for short display settings where brush texture and irregularity are assets—posters, cover art, packaging callouts, menus, and event promotions. It works well for punchy headings, quotes, or labels where a handmade, slightly distressed feel is desired, and is less ideal for dense body text where the textured edges can reduce clarity.
The tone is gritty and expressive, like quick brush lettering on paper. It reads as casual and human, with a slightly raw, distressed feel that can add attitude and immediacy. The texture introduces a tactile, handcrafted character that feels more spontaneous than polished.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, pressure-driven brush marks in a bold, readable print structure. Its goal is to deliver a handmade look with pronounced texture and personality while keeping familiar letter shapes for straightforward headline legibility.
The texture is strong enough to be a defining feature, especially in round shapes and diagonals where bristle drag and tapering are most visible. In longer text, the irregular edges create a lively color and can look intentionally rough; in smaller sizes the broken stroke details may start to merge visually.