Print Faloz 2 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, horror, labels, album art, spooky, grunge, vintage, pulp, folk, add texture, create mood, evoke vintage, look handmade, feel worn, distressed, ragged, torn, inked, textured.
A heavy, condensed display face with rough, irregular outlines that mimic torn paper or worn ink. Strokes are thick with subtly uneven edges and occasional nicks, giving each glyph a handmade, stamped feel. Forms lean toward old-style, blackletter-influenced silhouettes with sharp terminals and notched joins, while remaining unconnected and readable. Counters are relatively tight and the texture varies slightly letter to letter, emphasizing an intentionally distressed rhythm across words and lines.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, titles, packaging labels, and editorial headlines where texture and mood are desirable. It works well for horror, Halloween, fantasy, or rustic themed branding, and for album/film titling that benefits from a worn, analog look. Use generous sizes and spacing to preserve legibility in longer lines.
The font conveys a spooky, occult-tinged tone with a vintage pulp sensibility. Its weathered texture suggests age, mystery, and a slightly menacing theatricality, like a poster pulled from an old notice board. Overall, it reads as dramatic and gritty rather than polished or contemporary.
The design appears intended to deliver an expressive, hand-rendered print look that combines old-world letter shapes with deliberate distressing. Its goal is to add atmosphere and tactile character—like ink rubbed off a stamp or type worn through repeated impressions—while still keeping familiar letterforms for display readability.
In the sample text, the distressed edges stay consistent at display sizes, where the texture becomes part of the letterforms rather than mere noise. The irregular contours create lively word shapes, but the roughness can reduce clarity at smaller sizes or in dense paragraphs, especially where counters and joins tighten.