Print Farof 12 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: horror posters, event flyers, album covers, game titles, halloween designs, spooky, grunge, vintage, punk, campy, distressed effect, handmade feel, poster impact, horror mood, ragged, jagged, brushy, textured, organic.
A distressed, brush-like display face with a forward-leaning stance and irregular, torn edges. Strokes are heavy and taper unevenly, with rough terminals and occasional notches that mimic dry-brush or ink-bleed artifacts. Letterforms keep a generally upright skeleton but wobble subtly in width and contour, creating a lively, handmade rhythm. Counters are compact and sometimes pinched, and the overall texture reads as intentionally weathered rather than cleanly geometric.
Best suited to display settings where a gritty, horror-leaning or retro poster aesthetic is desired—titles, packaging callouts, flyers, and short punchy phrases. It also works well for themed graphics (Halloween, monsters, haunted attractions) and entertainment branding where texture and attitude matter more than long-form readability.
The font projects a playful menace and retro fright energy—more haunted-poster and midnight-movie than truly sinister. Its rough texture and exaggerated shapes give it a rebellious, DIY attitude that feels loud, dramatic, and attention-grabbing.
The design appears intended to simulate hand-drawn, distressed lettering with a consistent grunge texture, optimized for impactful headlines and thematic display work. Its uneven edges and energetic slant suggest a deliberate effort to evoke vintage horror ephemera and DIY print artifacts.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same distressed treatment and maintain legibility despite the rugged outlines. Numerals are chunky and stylized, with the same chipped, irregular edges, helping the set feel cohesive for headline use. The texture becomes a dominant feature as size decreases, so it reads best when given room to breathe.