Print Utnaf 10 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: fantasy titles, book covers, posters, game ui, packaging, medieval, storybook, mystical, whimsical, dramatic, evoke medieval, add drama, create fantasy, handcrafted feel, blackletter-leaning, calligraphic, flared, spiky, inked.
A stylized, hand-drawn display face with blackletter-leaning silhouettes and calligraphic, flared terminals. Strokes show moderate contrast and a brush/pen-like modulation, with sharp hooks, wedge-like feet, and occasional spur details that create a slightly spiky rhythm. Proportions feel compact with small lowercase bodies and taller ascenders, while capitals are more ornate and varied, giving the alphabet an intentionally irregular, crafted texture. Numerals follow the same inked, tapered logic, staying legible while retaining the decorative cuts and angled joins.
Best used for titles, headings, and short phrases where its decorative hooks and blackletter cues can be appreciated—such as fantasy game branding, book covers, event posters, or thematic packaging. It can also work for pull quotes or UI labels in stylized worlds, provided sizes are generous to avoid crowding and preserve the inner shapes.
The overall tone is medieval and storybook-like, with a mystical, dramatic flavor that reads as fantasy or folklore rather than formal historical reproduction. Its pointed terminals and ornamented caps add a playful menace—suited to spells, legends, and theatrical titles—while still remaining approachable and readable in short bursts.
The design appears intended to evoke hand-rendered, medieval-inspired lettering with a contemporary, illustrative looseness. It prioritizes atmosphere and character over neutrality, aiming to provide an instantly thematic voice for fantasy and storytelling contexts.
Uppercase letters carry most of the personality through pronounced swashes and notched forms, while the lowercase stays simpler but retains sharp entry/exit strokes. Spacing appears designed for display use, with some natural unevenness typical of drawn lettering that contributes to character but can become busy at very small sizes.