Typewriter Pehe 10 is a regular weight, normal width, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height, monospaced font.
Keywords: props, posters, packaging, editorial, headlines, gritty, vintage, analog, worn, utilitarian, aging effect, print texture, document feel, retro tone, mechanical voice, distressed, inked, blotchy, ragged, stamped.
A monospaced, typewriter-like design with sturdy slabby terminals and compact, squared-off proportions. The letterforms show intentionally irregular edges and soft, inked-in contours, as if struck through a ribbon with uneven pressure. Strokes are generally consistent but broken up by small nicks, blobs, and rough counters, creating a slightly noisy texture while preserving clear silhouettes across caps, lowercase, and numerals.
Well-suited for designs that benefit from an aged, utilitarian imprint: film/TV props, zines, retro posters, album art, and packaging that wants a stamped or receipt-like feel. It can also work for short editorial callouts and headings where texture is desirable, while longer passages will read best with generous size and leading to accommodate the deliberate roughness.
The overall tone feels archival and hands-on—suggesting paperwork, shipping labels, or photocopied documents. Its worn imprint and mechanical rhythm give it a gritty, analog character that reads as authentic and lived-in rather than pristine.
The font appears designed to emulate mechanical type output with accumulated wear—capturing the uneven inking, battered edges, and imperfect strike of physical typing. The goal seems to be delivering instant period flavor and tactile texture while keeping the disciplined alignment and rhythm of monospaced setting.
The distressed treatment is consistent across the set, producing a cohesive “used” color in text blocks. Numerals and capitals remain assertive and legible despite the roughened outlines, and the spacing reinforces a measured, machine-set cadence.