Distressed Ufro 11 is a regular weight, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, very short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, branding, packaging, social media, brushy, raw, energetic, casual, expressive, handmade feel, display impact, authenticity, motion, handwritten, dry-brush, textured, scratchy, slanted.
A slanted, brush-script style with quick, tapered strokes and visibly dry-brush texture that creates broken edges and occasional speckling. Letterforms are compact and upright-leaning with tight apertures, narrow counters, and a lively, uneven rhythm typical of fast marker or brush lettering. Stroke endings frequently flick to sharp points, while downstrokes show heavier deposits and rough interior grain, producing a natural, handmade contrast. Characters are mostly unconnected, with each glyph behaving like a drawn sign-letter rather than a continuous cursive script.
Best suited to short display settings where texture and gesture can be appreciated—posters, album or event graphics, packaging accents, logos/wordmarks, and social media headlines. It also works well for quote graphics and pull-phrases where a handwritten emphasis is desired, rather than for dense body text.
The font conveys an informal, street-level energy—confident, spontaneous, and slightly rugged. Its textured strokes read as authentic and human, suggesting speed, motion, and a hand-painted attitude rather than polished calligraphy.
Likely designed to capture the look of fast brush lettering with a deliberately imperfect, worn-in texture. The goal appears to be an expressive display face that adds personality and urgency, with a handmade finish that feels printed or painted rather than digitally clean.
Uppercase shapes are bold and attention-grabbing, while the lowercase stays compact and terse, reinforcing a punchy, note-like voice. The figures share the same brush texture and slanted movement, making them feel consistent in headlines and short numeric callouts.