Print Hiluy 1 is a very bold, normal width, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, stickers, headlines, album art, event promos, graffiti, rowdy, hand-cut, comic, high impact, handmade energy, street edge, playful grit, angular, chunky, jagged, brushy, spiky.
A heavy, hand-drawn display face with chunky, irregular letterforms and a strong, uneven rhythm. Strokes look brushy and cut with abrupt angles, producing sharp terminals and occasional notches that create a torn-paper feel. Counters are small and often asymmetrical, and the baseline and sidebearings vary noticeably, giving text a lively, bouncy texture. Uppercase and lowercase share a similar heft and simplified construction, emphasizing mass and silhouette over fine detail.
Best suited for display settings where impact matters more than smooth readability: posters, cover art, merchandise graphics, social tiles, and bold headline treatments. It works especially well at large sizes where the jagged terminals and hand-cut details can be appreciated, and where a gritty, informal voice is desired.
The overall tone is loud, scrappy, and street-leaning, with an energetic attitude that reads as playful but aggressive. Its jagged edges and compact counters suggest DIY signage, punk flyers, and marker-tag immediacy rather than polish or restraint.
The design appears intended to deliver maximum visual punch through heavy weight, angular brush-cut shapes, and intentionally inconsistent spacing. Rather than mimicking formal calligraphy, it leans into a raw, handmade aesthetic for expressive, attention-grabbing typography.
In longer text the dense color and uneven spacing create a textured block that favors short bursts over sustained reading. Numerals match the same cut, angular logic and maintain the same bold, irregular presence as the letters.