Print Egkop 8 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, packaging, logos, social media, playful, casual, handmade, friendly, retro, handmade feel, display impact, informal voice, signage style, brushy, lively, rounded, chunky, textured.
A slanted, brush-like handwritten design with thick, rounded strokes and subtly uneven contours that preserve a drawn-by-hand texture. Stroke endings are mostly blunt with occasional tapered flicks, and curves feel softly squared rather than perfectly geometric. Letterforms show variable widths and a lively rhythm, with slightly irregular bowls and terminals that keep the texture consistent across caps, lowercase, and numerals. Counters are generally open and readable, while forms like the looped lowercase g and the chunky, angled numerals emphasize the brushy construction.
This font works best for short-to-medium display text where its brush texture and slanted energy can lead the composition—such as headlines, posters, packaging, menu boards, and promotional graphics. It can also suit casual logo wordmarks and social media graphics, especially when an approachable handcrafted voice is desired. For long body copy, it’s likely most effective in larger sizes or in brief callouts where the strong stroke weight remains comfortable to read.
The font conveys an informal, upbeat tone with a personable, handmade character. Its energetic slant and inky weight give it a confident, attention-getting presence that feels approachable rather than formal. Overall it reads as playful and slightly retro, like quick marker lettering used for signage or headlines.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident brush lettering while maintaining consistent, repeatable shapes suitable for setting text. It balances handcrafted irregularity with enough structure to stay legible across a wide range of letters and numerals, aiming for a friendly display voice rather than a polished typographic one.
Capital letters are compact and sturdy, with broad curves in C/G/O and a slightly bouncy baseline feel in the sample text. Lowercase shapes stay relatively simple and legible, while a few distinctive forms (notably the single-storey a and the looped g) add character without turning into fully connected script. Numerals are bold and rounded with clear silhouettes designed to stand out at display sizes.