Print Igfo 5 is a bold, normal width, medium contrast, reverse italic, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, headlines, event flyers, game titles, graffiti, edgy, energetic, playful, rebellious, impact, handmade texture, street attitude, expressive display, angular, brushy, jagged, dynamic, irregular.
A jagged, brush-drawn print face with chunky strokes and sharply tapered terminals that create a cut-paper, blade-like silhouette. Letterforms lean with a lively slant and show irregular widths, uneven stroke edges, and frequent wedge-shaped joins, giving the alphabet a deliberately rough, hand-made rhythm. Counters are small and inconsistently opened, while curves are often faceted into angular arcs; overall spacing feels tight and compact, with strong black shapes dominating the page.
Best suited to short, attention-grabbing settings such as posters, album/track artwork, event flyers, game titles, and bold social graphics. It works well when the goal is to inject grit and motion into display text, but its aggressive shapes and dense texture make it less appropriate for long passages or small-size UI copy.
The font projects a loud, street-influenced attitude—expressive, confrontational, and high-energy. Its rough edges and spiky gestures read as rebellious and kinetic, with a playful, improvised confidence that feels more like tagging or poster lettering than conventional handwriting.
The design appears intended to emulate fast, hand-painted or marker-brushed lettering with a controlled chaos—prioritizing visual punch, texture, and attitude over typographic regularity. Its consistent use of sharp wedges and rough contours suggests a display font built to look raw and expressive while staying recognizable across the alphabet.
Distinctive triangular notches and sharp beak-like terminals recur across many glyphs, creating a coherent set of visual motifs despite the intentional irregularity. The numerals follow the same angular, brushy construction and appear designed for impact rather than neutrality.