Print Funif 1 is a very bold, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, stickers, kids media, playful, grungy, handmade, quirky, bold, handmade feel, rough texture, display impact, casual tone, rough, textured, blobby, inked, irregular.
A heavy, hand-drawn display face with chunky, rounded letterforms and noticeably irregular contours. Strokes look brush- or marker-made, with uneven edges, slight swelling, and occasional nicks and voids that create a distressed, ink-worn texture. Counters are often small and lumpy, terminals are mostly blunt, and spacing varies from glyph to glyph, producing an organic, imperfect rhythm. The overall silhouette is compact and dense, with simplified shapes that stay readable while emphasizing a tactile, handmade surface.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, headlines, album or event graphics, packaging callouts, and sticker-style branding where a bold handmade look is desired. It can work for brief paragraphs in playful contexts, but the dense weight and irregular texture favor display sizes and generous spacing.
The font projects a mischievous, casual energy—part doodled, part stamped, and a bit messy in a deliberate way. Its rough texture and bouncy proportions suggest zines, cartoons, and DIY signage rather than polished corporate communication.
The design appears intended to mimic hand-printed lettering made with a thick brush or marker, retaining natural inconsistencies to feel lively and human. Its distressed details and variable shapes aim to add character and spontaneity, prioritizing personality and visual punch over precision.
Uppercase forms tend to be wide and blocky, while lowercase stays similarly weighty with simplified bowls and short ascenders/descenders, keeping text lines dark and punchy. Numerals match the same blobby construction, maintaining consistent color in mixed settings. The distressed speckling and interior imperfections become more apparent at larger sizes, where the texture reads as a key stylistic feature.