Wacky Feraz 10 is a light, very narrow, low contrast, upright, short x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, book covers, packaging, party invites, whimsical, spidery, quirky, playful, offbeat, standout display, handmade charm, whimsical tone, textural rhythm, hand-drawn, monoline, tall, bouncy, uneven.
A tall, monoline display face with narrow proportions and a lightly wobbly, hand-drawn stroke. Many letters feature small mid-stem notches or node-like bumps that create a punctuated rhythm, while curves stay open and slightly irregular. Ascenders are notably long, counters are compact, and spacing feels lively and inconsistent in a deliberate way, giving words a wiry silhouette. Numerals and capitals follow the same thin, elongated construction, with simplified forms and occasional asymmetry that reinforces the handmade look.
Best suited to short display settings such as headlines, posters, book or zine covers, and themed packaging where its wiry texture can be appreciated at larger sizes. It can also work for playful invitations and signage, but its irregular rhythm and narrow forms make it less ideal for long-form reading or small-size UI text.
The overall tone is quirky and whimsical, with a spidery, eccentric energy that reads as playful rather than formal. Its odd little stem interruptions and bouncy proportions suggest a mischievous, storybook-like mood—good for designs that want to feel curious, peculiar, or humorously uncanny.
The design appears intended as a distinctive, decorative alphabet that prioritizes personality over typographic neutrality. By combining slender, elongated structures with consistent stem quirks, it aims to create a memorable voice for expressive titles and themed graphic work.
In the text sample, the distinctive mid-stem bumps become a recurring motif that adds texture across lines, especially in letters with long verticals (like f, j, l, t). Round letters remain relatively restrained and narrow, so the font’s character comes more from its linear construction and repeated interruptions than from heavy ornament or contrast.