Print Heros 10 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, logos, album covers, game titles, gothic, expressive, edgy, playful, handmade, drama, impact, gothic flavor, handmade character, display texture, angular, faceted, spiky, chiseled, blackletter-inspired.
A highly stylized, hand-drawn display face with compact proportions and a forward-leaning, energetic stance. Letterforms are built from sharp, faceted strokes with pointed terminals and irregular angles, creating a carved, shard-like silhouette. Stroke weight is heavy overall, with modest internal modulation and frequent wedge-shaped joins; counters tend to be tight and angular. Spacing and widths vary noticeably from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an informal, drawn rhythm while keeping a consistent blackletter-leaning structure across the set.
Best used at display sizes where the angular details and handmade irregularities can be appreciated—such as posters, event flyers, branding marks, album/track artwork, packaging accents, and game or fantasy-themed title treatments. For longer text, it works more as a short burst (taglines, pull quotes) than for sustained reading.
The font projects a gothic, rebellious mood with a cartoonish edge—like rough brush or marker lettering filtered through medieval blackletter shapes. Its jagged contours and assertive density feel loud and attention-grabbing, suited to dramatic or mischievous messaging rather than quiet readability.
The design appears intended to deliver a hand-rendered, blackletter-adjacent look with modern punch—combining medieval cues (spurs, broken strokes, vertical emphasis) with an informal, sketchy execution for expressive, contemporary display typography.
The sample text shows strong word-shape texture and pronounced dark color, with distinctive, spurred capitals and lively lowercase that can look almost cut-paper in their broken, angled edges. Numerals follow the same chiseled logic, reading as bold, decorative figures designed to match the letterforms.