Print Fogak 8 is a very bold, very narrow, medium contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, headlines, packaging, horror, event flyers, spooky, grunge, handmade, playful, quirky, display impact, handmade texture, horror mood, diy character, rough, jagged, distressed, chunky, condensed.
A condensed, heavy display face with irregular, hand-cut edges and visibly uneven stroke boundaries. Letterforms are mostly upright with compact counters and a tight, vertical rhythm, while widths vary from glyph to glyph, reinforcing a handmade feel. Terminals and joins often end in blunt, chipped shapes, creating a textured silhouette that reads like brushed ink or torn paper. The overall color on the page is dense and dark, with small interior spaces and occasional notches that add grit without becoming fully illegible at display sizes.
Best suited for short, high-impact text such as posters, titles, pull quotes, and attention-grabbing labels where the textured edges can be appreciated. It works particularly well for seasonal or thematic designs—especially spooky or retro-grunge concepts—on packaging, event flyers, and social graphics. For long paragraphs or small sizes, the dense weight and tight counters may reduce clarity.
The font carries a spooky, slightly comedic tone—suggestive of Halloween graphics, low-fi posters, and playful horror tropes. Its rough, jagged texture and narrow stance feel energetic and a bit unruly, giving text a crafty, DIY personality rather than a polished commercial look.
The design appears intended to deliver a bold, condensed display voice with an intentionally rough, handmade texture. Its irregular edges and variable letter widths aim to inject character and atmosphere, prioritizing personality and thematic impact over neutral readability.
Uppercase and lowercase share the same roughened construction and condensed proportions, producing consistent texture across mixed-case settings. Figures follow the same distressed, blocky treatment and feel designed to match headline use rather than extended reading.