Distressed Nase 9 is a regular weight, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, labels, event promo, handmade, rustic, playful, casual, grunge, hand-lettered feel, print texture, casual display, human warmth, rough-edged, inked, textured, wobbly, organic.
A rough, hand-rendered sans with visibly uneven contours and subtly blunted terminals, as if made with a dry marker or soft brush and then reproduced through imperfect printing. Stroke widths stay fairly consistent, but edges wobble and swell slightly, creating a lively rhythm across words. Counters are open and simple, curves are round but not perfectly smooth, and joins show small irregularities that reinforce the textured, distressed surface. Spacing appears moderately loose and the overall fit feels natural rather than engineered, helping the letters breathe in display sizes.
Well-suited for posters, packaging, labels, and promotional headlines where a handmade, textured voice is desirable. It performs best at medium-to-large sizes where the rough edges and ink texture remain visible, and can also work for short subheads or pull quotes when a casual, tactile tone is needed.
The font reads as approachable and human, with a quirky, slightly scruffy charm. Its distressed texture adds a tactile, analog feel that can suggest handmade craft, casual humor, or a lightly weathered poster aesthetic without becoming overly harsh or aggressive.
Likely designed to capture the feel of hand-lettered signage and imperfect print reproduction, translating natural stroke wobble and worn edges into a consistent typographic system. The goal appears to be an expressive, humanized texture while keeping letterforms familiar enough for clear reading in display applications.
Capitals are straightforward and legible with mild wobble, while lowercase maintains a friendly, rounded silhouette and a consistent, informal tone. Numerals share the same rough imprint and retain clear shapes, supporting short numeric callouts in the same voice as the text.