Print Elby 6 is a regular weight, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, horror, album art, packaging, raw, grunge, handmade, spooky, rustic, distressing, handmade feel, edgy display, tactile texture, informality, rough edge, ragged, dry brush, uneven, textured.
A rough, hand-drawn print with ragged contours and visibly uneven stroke edges, as if made with a dry brush or marker on textured paper. Strokes show frequent wobble and small nicks, with blunt terminals and occasional hooked or flared ends. Proportions are compact with tight interior counters, and curves (notably in C/O/S) feel slightly faceted rather than smoothly geometric. Overall spacing is lively and irregular, with a consistent handmade rhythm across uppercase, lowercase, and figures.
Best suited to display settings where texture is an asset: posters, headlines, titles, and short bursts of text. It can work well for horror or Halloween-themed materials, gritty editorial callouts, album/merch graphics, and rustic or handmade-feeling packaging. For long passages, the busy edges and irregular spacing are more effective as accents than body text.
The texture and irregularity give the face a raw, gritty tone that reads as informal and slightly ominous. It evokes DIY posters, distressed signage, and horror-leaning display typography without becoming fully illegible. The overall feel is energetic, unruly, and intentionally imperfect.
The design appears intended to capture a distressed, hand-printed look with consistent texture across the character set. It prioritizes personality and tactile edge over precision, aiming for a bold, attention-grabbing voice that feels drawn rather than typeset.
Uppercase forms lean toward sturdy, sign-like silhouettes, while the lowercase introduces more idiosyncratic shapes and bounce, increasing the hand-rendered character in running text. Numerals maintain the same distressed edge quality and feel bold enough to hold up in short numeric strings.