Print Igje 14 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: fantasy titles, game ui, posters, packaging, logotypes, medieval, gothic, mischievous, storybook, rustic, thematic display, handmade energy, gothic homage, dramatic impact, quirky character, angular, spiky, chiseled, textured, calligraphic.
A compact, hand-drawn blackletter-inspired display face with sharp, angular joins and wedge-like terminals. Strokes show lively, brushy modulation with occasional thinning at turns, creating a lightly textured, cut-paper feel. Letterforms lean back slightly and vary in width from glyph to glyph, giving lines a bouncy, irregular rhythm. Counters are tight and shapes are simplified and punchy rather than strictly traditional, keeping the overall silhouette bold and jagged.
Best suited to display settings where character matters more than continuous-text readability: fantasy or historical-themed titles, game menus and UI accents, poster headlines, packaging and label graphics, and short logotypes. It can also work for themed event materials (fairs, festivals, medieval nights) where a handmade gothic flavor is desired.
The font reads as medieval and gothic, with a playful, slightly mischievous tone rather than solemn formality. Its spiky contours and uneven hand pressure suggest folk signage, fantasy worlds, and tongue-in-cheek “old tavern” character. The overall feeling is energetic, quirky, and a bit dramatic.
The design appears intended to evoke blackletter/gothic traditions through simplified, hand-rendered forms, trading strict calligraphic fidelity for punchy silhouettes and expressive irregularity. Its compact proportions and aggressive terminals aim to deliver instant thematic signaling—antique, fantastical, and slightly rebellious—at headline sizes.
Caps are especially theatrical with exaggerated diagonals and pointed finials, while lowercase remains compact and strongly faceted, preserving a consistent color on the line. Numerals share the same chiseled, hand-cut attitude, with distinctive curves rendered as angular arcs. The dense shapes can crowd at smaller sizes, so spacing and size choice will strongly affect readability.