Distressed Ilro 10 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font visually similar to 'Sebino Soft' by Nine Font (names referenced only for comparison).
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, packaging, stickers, grunge, playful, raw, comic, impact, texture, diy look, rough print, blobby, organic, ragged, inked, chunky.
A heavy, chunky display face with blobby, irregular outlines and uneven internal counters that mimic rough ink spread or degraded printing. Strokes stay broadly consistent in thickness, but edges wobble and pinch unpredictably, producing a soft, lumpy silhouette rather than sharp corners. Letterforms are compact with small apertures and counters, and spacing appears intentionally unruly, adding a handmade, stamped feel. Numerals and capitals keep simple, readable structures while retaining the same distressed, melt-like contouring.
Best suited to display settings such as posters, event flyers, album/cover art, packaging callouts, and bold social graphics where the irregular edge character can be appreciated. It works well for short headlines, logos, and punchy taglines, especially when paired with a cleaner secondary text face for longer copy.
The overall tone is gritty and mischievous, with a casual, slightly chaotic energy. It suggests DIY materials, rough posters, and playful shock-value headlines rather than polished editorial typography.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual impact through dense letterforms and deliberately degraded contours, capturing the look of worn printing, thick marker, or imperfect stamping. It prioritizes attitude and texture over refinement while keeping underlying letter structures straightforward for quick recognition.
The texture comes primarily from contour distortion and counter roughness rather than added grain, so the black mass remains solid at a distance while the edge character shows up more clearly at larger sizes. The condensed openings and heavy color can reduce clarity in dense paragraphs, but it reads strongly in short bursts.