Distressed Uhze 5 is a regular weight, very narrow, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, labels, book covers, vintage, rugged, rustic, dramatic, noir, evoke print wear, create vintage tone, add texture, headline impact, woodtype, posterlike, textured, inked, condensed.
A condensed, high-contrast display serif with tall proportions and a tight overall rhythm. Strokes show abrupt thick–thin transitions, wedge-like serifs, and slightly flared terminals that give the letters a carved, woodtype feel. The texture is intentionally imperfect: counters and stems show mottled wear and uneven ink, producing a consistent distressed pattern across caps, lowercase, and numerals. Curves are narrow and taut, with compact bowls and a generally vertical stance that reads sharply at headline sizes.
Best suited to posters, headlines, and short bursts of text where the condensed width and strong contrast can create impact. The distressed texture makes it especially effective for packaging, labels, and editorial display work that benefits from a vintage, tactile print look. For longer passages, it will read most comfortably at larger sizes where the texture and thin strokes have room to breathe.
The font conveys a weathered, old-print character that feels bold, theatrical, and a bit gritty. Its worn texture suggests age, handling, and rough production, bringing a sense of authenticity associated with vintage posters and frontier-era or industrial ephemera. The narrow, high-contrast shapes add drama and intensity, leaning toward noir and stage-poster energy rather than quiet refinement.
The design appears intended to recreate the look of worn letterpress or woodtype printing in a condensed display format. By pairing crisp, high-contrast serif forms with consistent ink wear, it aims to deliver immediate period flavor and a tactile, printed authenticity for attention-grabbing titles.
The distressing appears as interior speckling and roughened edges rather than heavy deformation, so letterforms remain recognizable while still reading as intentionally aged. Numerals follow the same condensed, high-contrast construction and share the same ink-wear texture, helping mixed text stay stylistically cohesive.