Print Udlos 10 is a bold, narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, album art, horror titles, comics, grungy, energetic, edgy, playful, handmade, impact, handmade feel, texture, attitude, spontaneity, brushy, rough, spiky, irregular, expressive.
An expressive hand-drawn print face with thick, brush-like strokes and visibly rough edges. Letterforms lean slightly and vary in width and contour, creating an animated rhythm rather than a rigid baseline-and-stem system. Terminals often taper or flick into pointed spurs, and curves show uneven pressure, producing a textured, inked feel. Uppercase shapes are compact and punchy, while lowercase forms are simplified and open, keeping counters readable despite the rugged outline.
Best suited for short, high-impact settings such as posters, covers, event promos, and bold headlines where the rough brush texture can be appreciated. It can also support genre-forward titling (thriller, horror, punk/garage, Halloween) and playful display in comics or packaging, but is less appropriate for long passages of small body text.
The overall tone is bold and unruly, balancing a comic, handmade charm with a hint of menace from its sharp flicks and jagged edges. It reads as lively and spontaneous—like quick sign lettering or marker/brush titling—making it feel informal, confident, and attention-seeking.
The design appears intended to capture fast, gestural brush lettering in a cohesive digital set—prioritizing personality, texture, and immediacy over strict uniformity. Its irregular outlines and sharp terminal flicks suggest a deliberate move toward gritty, hand-made display typography that stands out at large sizes.
The texture is consistent across letters and numerals, with occasional thorny protrusions and blunt, flattened joins that emphasize a hand-rendered process. Round characters (O, Q, 0, 8) remain fairly solid and dark, while diagonals and junctions (K, M, N, W, X) show the most dramatic brush variation and spikes.