Print Heriy 1 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, book covers, game titles, playful, rowdy, storybook, medieval, handmade, expressiveness, handmade feel, bold impact, fantasy cue, angular, jagged, chunky, quirky, expressive.
This face uses heavy, ink-like strokes with a distinctly hand-drawn rhythm and irregular detailing. Letterforms lean left with a lively, uneven baseline and shifting internal proportions, creating a bouncy texture across lines. Shapes are built from angular, wedge-like terminals and sharp cut-ins that mimic a broad marker or brush pressed and lifted, producing chiseled corners and occasional notch-like counters. Curves are often faceted rather than smooth, and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an intentionally informal, drawn look.
Best suited to short, prominent text where its rough, angular character can be appreciated—titles, posters, cover art, and packaging with a playful fantasy or medieval cue. It can also work for logos or event graphics that benefit from a bold, handmade presence. For paragraph setting, larger sizes and generous spacing help maintain clarity.
The overall tone feels mischievous and energetic, with a pseudo-gothic flavor that reads more playful than formal. Its jagged edges and animated slant suggest adventure, fantasy, and comic mischief rather than refinement. The texture is bold and attention-grabbing, giving headlines a loud, handmade personality.
The design appears intended to capture a hand-drawn, blackletter-leaning display voice with bold impact and a deliberately imperfect finish. Its leftward slant, jagged terminals, and variable widths prioritize personality and motion over strict consistency, aiming for expressive, attention-first typography.
Uppercase and lowercase share a consistent blackletter-inspired skeleton, but with simplified construction and irregular stroke finishing. Numerals are similarly chunky and stylized, matching the angular terminal language. In longer text, the dense color and active outlines create a strong pattern that favors display sizes over small reading text.