Distressed Nimup 13 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, t-shirts, playful, handmade, rugged, casual, retro, printed wear, handmade feel, vintage texture, casual branding, rounded, inky, blotchy, textured, chunky.
A heavy, rounded sans with softened corners, uneven stroke edges, and scattered interior voids that mimic worn ink or rough printing. Strokes are generally monoline in spirit but show subtle swelling and tapering from the distressed texture. Counters tend to be open and generous (notably in O, e, and a), while joins and terminals look slightly blunted and imperfect, creating a lively rhythm. Overall proportions feel friendly and compact, with small variations in width and outline integrity across glyphs that reinforce the handmade, printed-wear effect.
Best suited for short display text such as posters, event headlines, product labels, café signage, stickers, and apparel graphics where texture is a feature. It can also work for playful brand marks or social graphics, especially when an analog, printed feel is desired; for long text, larger sizes help preserve the distressed details.
The font conveys a casual, approachable tone with a gritty, analog edge—like stamped packaging, screen-printed merch, or a well-loved poster pulled from a stack. Its rounded shapes keep it warm and inviting, while the scuffed texture adds attitude and imperfection that reads as authentic and tactile.
The design appears intended to deliver a friendly rounded sans silhouette while layering in a worn, inky texture to suggest tactile printing processes. It aims for immediate readability at display scale with a deliberately imperfect finish that adds character and a vintage-casual flavor.
Distress is consistent across letters and numerals, showing as chips, pinholes, and roughened contours rather than extreme deformation, so the letterforms remain recognizable at display sizes. The uppercase set feels particularly sturdy and sign-like, while the lowercase maintains a simple, friendly construction that pairs well with informal messaging.