Print Yoril 10 is a very light, very narrow, high contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: horror titles, halloween, posters, book covers, game ui, spooky, handmade, uneasy, quirky, rustic, add tension, handmade feel, distressed texture, quirky display, scratchy, wiry, ragged, organic, inked.
A wiry handwritten print with irregular stroke edges and visible jitter, as if drawn with a fine pen or dry brush. Stems are tall and slender, with narrow bowls and compact counters, while weight shifts abruptly along curves and joins, creating a slightly distressed, scratch-like texture. Terminals are often tapered or blunt with occasional hooks, and round forms (O, Q, 0) read as imperfect ovals rather than geometric circles. Overall spacing feels loose and inconsistent in a natural way, reinforcing the hand-rendered rhythm across the alphabet and numerals.
Best suited to short headlines, titles, and atmospheric packaging or poster work where texture and mood matter more than typographic neutrality. It can also work for on-screen uses like game menus, chapter openers, and pull quotes when set with generous size and spacing to preserve its delicate strokes.
The letterforms project an eerie, uneasy tone—playful but unsettling—like hand-lettering for a spooky note or a low-fi horror title card. Its fragile, scratchy construction and uneven ink presence add tension and a sense of mystery while still staying readable at display sizes.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, lightly inked hand lettering with a deliberately imperfect finish. Its goal is to add character and tension through uneven contours, narrow proportions, and scratchy contrast while maintaining enough structure for legible display typography.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same thin, drawn quality, with the lowercase staying relatively small against tall ascenders/descenders. Numerals follow the same irregular, hand-sketched logic, with open, slightly wobbly curves and occasional angular turns that keep the texture consistent in running text.