Print Fema 10 is a bold, normal width, low contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, social media, headlines, event promos, casual, energetic, friendly, handmade, confident, handmade feel, poster impact, casual branding, expressive display, quick lettering, brushy, textured, rounded, bouncy, dynamic.
A lively brush-pen style with thick, rounded strokes and visibly organic edges. Letterforms lean forward with a loose, handwritten rhythm, and stroke terminals often taper or flick as if made with a felt brush. Proportions are informal and slightly variable from glyph to glyph, with open counters and simplified shapes that keep the texture bold and readable. Spacing feels naturally uneven in a way that reinforces the hand-drawn character, while maintaining consistent overall weight and a steady baseline.
Works best for short to medium display copy where a handmade voice is desirable: posters, social content, promotional graphics, packaging callouts, and casual branding. It can also serve for quotes, invitations, and signage where texture and energy matter more than strict uniformity. For long-form text, the strong brush presence may be better reserved for emphasis or section headers.
The tone is warm and upbeat, like quick marker lettering on a poster or product label. Its energetic slant and soft, inky texture give it an approachable, spontaneous feel that reads as personal rather than polished. Overall it conveys a playful, modern-casual attitude with a touch of emphasis and motion.
Designed to capture quick, confident brush lettering in a repeatable typeface, emphasizing motion, warmth, and an authentic hand-drawn texture. The goal appears to be an expressive display face that feels spontaneous and personal while staying legible at typical headline sizes.
Round dots and compact punctuation match the chunky stroke weight, and numerals follow the same brushed construction for a cohesive set. Uppercase forms are punchy and poster-like, while lowercase retains a looser, more conversational flow, making mixed-case settings feel especially natural.