Print Horoz 1 is a bold, wide, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, comics, halloween, playful, handmade, spooky, grungy, quirky, handmade texture, expressive display, casual tone, edgy playfulness, rough, blobby, inky, organic, irregular.
A chunky, hand-drawn print style with heavy, uneven strokes and soft, blunted terminals. The outlines wobble with an inky, slightly blobby edge, creating an organic silhouette rather than clean geometric forms. Counters are small and sometimes lopsided, and the overall rhythm is irregular with noticeable variation in glyph widths and stroke thickness, like marker or brush lettering scanned from paper.
Best suited to short, bold applications where texture is an asset: posters, headers, labels, playful branding, and comic-style captions. It can also work for seasonal or spooky themes when set large, where the irregular edges and dense color hold up without needing fine detail.
The texture and wobble give it an informal, mischievous tone that can read as scrappy and cartoonish, with a hint of spooky or Halloween-style hand lettering. It feels energetic and imperfect in a deliberate way, prioritizing personality over polish.
The design appears intended to mimic thick, hand-inked lettering with visible human variation, delivering a friendly yet edgy display voice. It aims for immediacy and character—like quick brush or marker strokes—rather than typographic precision.
Capitals are compact and weighty, while lowercase maintains a simple printed construction with single-storey shapes (notably the a) and round, soft forms. Numerals follow the same hand-inked logic with irregular curves and slightly unstable baselines, helping the set feel consistently handmade in both display and short text samples.