Print Yamos 1 is a bold, very narrow, high contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, album art, social media, energetic, expressive, casual, dynamic, edgy, handmade feel, motion, impact, personality, informality, brushy, textured, slanted, gestural, jagged.
A gestural brush-style script with a pronounced rightward slant and lively, pressure-driven stroke modulation. Letterforms are built from quick, tapered strokes with occasional dry-brush texture and slightly ragged edges, producing crisp terminals and sharp joins. Spacing and widths vary per glyph, giving the text a hand-drawn rhythm; caps are tall and assertive, while lowercase forms stay compact with minimal counters and a generally tight, narrow footprint. Numerals match the same brisk, handwritten construction and maintain the same angled, energetic baseline behavior.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, packaging callouts, branding accents, and social media graphics where the brush energy can be a feature. It also works well for pull quotes or display headlines when paired with a quieter sans or serif for body copy.
The overall tone is fast, confident, and informal—like marker or brush lettering made in one take. Its uneven texture and sharp, flicked endings add a slightly rebellious, streetwise feel while still reading as friendly and personal.
The design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted or marker-written lettering in a consistent, usable set—prioritizing motion, contrast, and expressive texture for display-oriented typography.
Uppercase shapes lean toward simplified, single-stroke constructions that emphasize speed and gesture over symmetry. Several letters show intentional irregularities in stroke density and edge texture, which become a key part of the personality in longer text lines.