Print Fokad 1 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, merch, social graphics, expressive, gritty, casual, energetic, handmade, handmade feel, add texture, create urgency, inject personality, brushy, textured, ragged, gestural, organic.
A lively, brush-drawn print style with noticeably textured edges and irregular stroke terminals. The letterforms lean forward with a quick, gestural rhythm, and widths vary from glyph to glyph, enhancing a handmade, improvised feel. Strokes show moderate thick–thin modulation and occasional wobble, with angular joins and slightly inconsistent curves that read as intentionally rough rather than geometric. Counters are generally open, and spacing feels natural and uneven in a way that reinforces the drawn character.
This font works best for short to medium copy where texture and personality are an asset—posters, event promos, cover art, packaging callouts, apparel/merch graphics, and social media headlines. It can also add a handmade accent to logos or badges, especially when paired with a cleaner sans for supporting text.
The font conveys a raw, energetic tone—like marker or dry-brush lettering made in one pass. Its roughness and forward slant give it urgency and attitude, while the simple, unconnected construction keeps it approachable and informal. Overall it reads as playful-but-edgy, suited to expressive messaging rather than polished refinement.
The design appears intended to replicate quick, informal brush lettering with visible ink/paint drag and natural variation. Rather than aiming for calligraphic precision, it prioritizes energy, texture, and a direct human touch for attention-grabbing display use.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same hand-rendered logic, with simplified shapes and occasional exaggerated diagonals that create a punchy texture in blocks of text. Numerals match the brush treatment with uneven baselines and slightly quirky silhouettes, helping mixed content feel cohesive. The distressed contouring is consistent across glyphs, so the texture remains stable even as shapes vary.