Print Yegid 10 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, album art, social ads, energetic, expressive, casual, handmade, edgy, add energy, signal handmade, create impact, suggest grit, feel spontaneous, brushy, textured, dry-brush, angular, gestural.
A condensed, brush-script style with a pronounced rightward slant and lively, variable stroke thickness. The letterforms are built from tapered, pressure-driven strokes with rough, dry-brush edges that leave subtle texture and irregular contours. Counters are tight and often partially implied, and terminals frequently end in sharp flicks or blunt, ink-loaded stops. The rhythm is fast and uneven in a deliberate way, with slight baseline bounce and handwritten inconsistencies that keep repeated shapes from looking mechanical.
Best suited to short, high-impact settings such as posters, promotional headlines, packaging accents, and editorial or social graphics where texture and momentum are desirable. It can also work for titles over photography or illustrations, especially when a gritty, hand-painted feel is needed more than small-size readability.
The overall tone feels punchy and spontaneous, like quick marker or brush lettering made in one pass. Its compressed, slanted stance and jagged texture add urgency and attitude, reading as informal, contemporary, and a bit gritty rather than polished or classic.
This design appears intended to capture the immediacy of hand-painted signage or brush lettering in a compact, attention-grabbing form. The narrow build, energetic slant, and textured stroke edges prioritize personality and impact over neutrality, making it a strong choice for expressive display typography.
Uppercase forms are tall and assertive, with narrow proportions that help create dense, poster-like blocks of text. Lowercase characters keep a simplified, printed structure rather than connecting, which maintains clarity while preserving the hand-drawn energy. Numerals match the same brisk, brushy construction, making them feel cohesive in headlines and callouts.