Print Foril 8 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, album covers, headlines, packaging, event flyers, grunge, handmade, playful, rustic, punk, expressiveness, handmade texture, high impact, informal display, rough edges, brushy, textured, irregular, chunky.
A hand-drawn, inked display face with chunky strokes and visibly uneven contours. Letterforms show irregular, slightly jagged edges and a dry-brush/marker feel, creating texture in the silhouettes rather than clean curves. Proportions skew compact and tall, with mixed widths and small inconsistencies in stroke endings that enhance the handmade rhythm. Counters are often narrow and organic, and terminals tend to look torn or blunted rather than crisply finished.
Best suited for display settings where texture and personality are an asset—posters, album/EP artwork, event flyers, and bold editorial headlines. It can also work on packaging and labels that aim for a handmade or gritty aesthetic. Use generous size and spacing for maximum clarity, letting the rough edges read as an intentional stylistic feature.
The overall tone is raw and lively, with a zine-like grit that feels informal and energetic. Its rough texture and irregular rhythm suggest an expressive, rebellious attitude while still staying legible in short reads. The character set reads as deliberately imperfect, leaning into a crafty, street-poster personality.
The design appears intended to mimic quick, confident hand-lettering made with a brush or heavy marker, prioritizing attitude and texture over geometric precision. Its irregular outlines and compact proportions are geared toward high-impact titles and punchy messaging rather than long-form reading.
The font maintains consistent weight and presence across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, but allows noticeable per-glyph variation that feels intentional rather than accidental. Round characters like O/Q and 8 retain strong mass, while diagonals (K, V, W, X) appear sharper and more brush-driven. The texture is prominent enough that it will visually thicken at small sizes or on low-resolution output.