Distressed Opmis 11 is a regular weight, narrow, high contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album art, horror titles, event flyers, zines, grunge, handmade, raw, edgy, analog, add texture, create tension, handmade feel, retro print, rough, brushy, inked, textured, ragged.
A condensed, slanted handwritten display face with brush-and-ink construction and pronounced irregularity. Strokes show abrupt tapering, occasional blots, and broken edges that create a distressed silhouette, while counters remain mostly open and legible. The rhythm is lively and uneven, with variable stroke endings and slightly inconsistent widths that reinforce a hand-rendered, printed-from-worn-type feel across both uppercase and lowercase.
Best suited to display applications where texture is a feature: posters, cover art, themed titles, and short promotional copy. It works well when you want a handmade, distressed voice for entertainment branding, seasonal or spooky campaigns, and grungy packaging or merch graphics.
The font conveys a gritty, DIY attitude with a slightly eerie, expressive energy. Its rough texture and scratchy movement suggest underground posters, zine aesthetics, and weathered signage rather than polished editorial typography.
The design appears intended to emulate quick brush lettering and worn ink impressions, combining expressive slant with deliberate roughness for strong visual character. Its condensed proportions and high-contrast strokes prioritize impact and mood over extended reading comfort.
Uppercase forms read as tall and assertive with spiky terminals, while lowercase stays compact with a modest x-height, increasing the perceived verticality in mixed-case settings. Numerals follow the same inked, irregular logic, keeping the texture consistent in headings and short lines. At smaller sizes the distressed edges may visually fill in, so the texture becomes more dominant than fine detail.