Print Firom 12 is a bold, narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, headlines, packaging, branding, grunge, handmade, punk, raw, noisy, diy texture, poster impact, gritty tone, handmade feel, rough, distressed, brushy, irregular, textured.
A rough, hand-drawn print face with heavy, inked strokes and strongly irregular contours. Letterforms are compact and mostly upright, with a slightly condensed feel and a lively, uneven rhythm across the line. Edges appear chipped and blotty, as if made with a dry brush or worn stamp, creating frequent nicks, gaps, and textured counters. Overall proportions are consistent enough for continuous reading, but each glyph carries small variations that reinforce a deliberately imperfect, analog look.
Best suited for display use such as posters, album covers, event flyers, and punchy headline treatments where texture is part of the message. It can also work for gritty packaging and brand marks that want a handmade, street-level feel, while longer text benefits from generous sizing and leading.
The font conveys an energetic, rebellious tone with a DIY, photocopied texture. Its distressed weight and jittery outlines suggest underground posters, zines, and rough-cut signage rather than polished editorial typography.
The design appears intended to simulate bold hand-painted or marker lettering with intentional wear, capturing the look of ink that has skipped, bled, or been degraded through reproduction. It prioritizes character and texture over uniform precision, aiming for immediate impact and a tactile, analog presence.
The texture is substantial enough to become a key visual feature, especially at larger sizes where the worn edges and internal breaks are clearly visible. At small sizes, the heavy ink and rough apertures can start to close up, so spacing and size choices will strongly affect clarity.