Print Walok 1 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: halloween, posters, headlines, book covers, game titles, spooky, hand-drawn, uneasy, playful, grungy, hand-lettered feel, eerie tone, rough texture, display impact, wiry, ragged, inked, irregular, organic.
This is a hand-drawn, inked print style with tall, wiry letterforms and noticeably irregular outlines. Strokes show subtle swelling and tapering, with occasional blobby terminals that suggest a brush or marker pressed unevenly to the page. Curves and bowls are slightly lopsided, counters are inconsistent, and vertical stems tend to dominate, creating a lean, scratchy rhythm. Overall spacing feels loose and uneven in an intentional way, with per-glyph width and sidebearings varying to reinforce the handmade texture.
Best suited for short display settings where texture and mood matter more than typographic neutrality—posters, spooky or quirky headlines, game titles, event flyers, and book or album covers. It can also work for packaging accents or pull quotes when you want an intentionally rough, hand-lettered voice; longer text will look highly stylized and busy.
The font conveys a spooky, uneasy energy with a playful edge, like handwritten titles for horror-comedy or Halloween ephemera. Its wobbly, imperfect contours read as human and immediate, with a slightly distressed, drippy character that hints at ink, grime, or eerie atmosphere.
The design appears intended to mimic quick hand lettering with uneven ink flow: tall, narrow forms, jittery contours, and slightly drippy terminals combine to create a deliberately imperfect display face with strong character.
Distinctive, elongated capitals and narrow lowercase forms create a strong vertical cadence, while the numbers share the same irregular, hand-inked construction. The texture is consistent across the set—rough edges, variable stroke pressure, and slightly jittery curves—so it feels cohesive even when letter shapes vary from glyph to glyph.