Print Feve 4 is a very bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, streetwear, event promo, energetic, edgy, raw, youthful, streetwise, handmade feel, impact, expressiveness, texture, brushy, ragged, rough, dry-brush, slanted.
A forceful brush-style print with a pronounced rightward slant and dense, heavy strokes. The forms show a dry-brush texture with ragged edges, occasional tapered terminals, and visible stroke direction that gives each glyph a hand-painted feel. Counters are compact and sometimes partially closed by ink buildup, while spacing and widths vary from letter to letter, reinforcing an irregular, handmade rhythm. The lowercase appears relatively compact in height with assertive ascenders and descenders, and the numerals carry the same chunky, gestural construction.
Best suited to short, high-impact text such as posters, flyers, packaging callouts, social graphics, and display headlines where the brush texture can be appreciated. It can also work for logos and titling that aim for a hand-painted, gritty aesthetic rather than a clean, corporate finish.
The overall tone is bold, expressive, and a little gritty—more like quick marker or paint signage than polished lettering. It reads as spontaneous and high-impact, with a rebellious, street-poster energy that feels informal and attention-grabbing.
Likely designed to emulate fast, confident brush lettering with visible texture and imperfect edges, prioritizing personality and punch over uniform precision. The goal appears to be an expressive display voice that feels handmade and immediate.
At larger sizes the textured edges and stroke breakup become a key feature; at smaller sizes some internal details and tight counters may compress visually. The slant and uneven stroke endings create a lively baseline movement that adds urgency to headlines.