Distressed Keji 6 is a very bold, wide, high contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, headlines, packaging, event flyers, grunge, industrial, punk, handmade, rugged, distressed impact, gritty branding, analog texture, poster style, eroded, roughened, inked, blotchy, speckled.
A heavy, slab-serif display face with strongly roughened contours and irregular interior counters. Strokes stay largely upright and blocky, with compact joins and sturdy horizontals, while the edges look chewed, worn, or over-inked for an intentionally degraded print effect. Letter widths vary noticeably, and the texture is consistent across capitals, lowercase, and numerals, creating a dense, high-impact color on the page.
Best suited for large-scale applications where the erosion and ink texture can be appreciated: posters, album and merch graphics, bold editorial headlines, and rugged branding accents. It works well when you want type to feel printed, worn, or aggressively tactile rather than clean and neutral.
The font projects a gritty, confrontational tone—like stenciled signage, distressed posters, or worn packaging. Its rough texture and chunky serifs give it a raw, analog energy that reads as rebellious and urban, with a tactile, imperfect finish.
The design appears intended to merge classic slab-serif, poster-style structure with a deliberately degraded surface, delivering strong impact while signaling age, wear, or rough production. It prioritizes character and texture over fine detail, aiming for immediate attention and a handmade, distressed presence.
The distressed treatment is pronounced enough that small sizes can fill in and lose detail, especially in tight counters and at joins. Spacing appears relatively open for such heavy forms, helping headings remain readable, but the overall texture dominates and becomes a key part of the visual message.