Print Yaduz 4 is a bold, very narrow, medium contrast, italic, short x-height font.
Keywords: posters, packaging, headlines, logos, social ads, brushy, casual, energetic, rustic, quirky, hand-lettered feel, expressive texture, compact impact, casual tone, textured, dry-brush, condensed, slanted, painterly.
A condensed, slanted brush-print style with visibly textured strokes that mimic a dry brush or marker. Forms are monoline-ish with subtle contrast from pressure changes and tapering terminals, and the edges show deliberate roughness and ink breakup. The rhythm is quick and slightly irregular, with variable character widths and compact counters; the lowercase appears relatively short against the ascenders, reinforcing a punchy, vertical feel. Figures and capitals follow the same brushed construction, with simple, legible silhouettes and occasional swashy curves.
Best suited to short display text such as posters, packaging callouts, brand marks, and punchy headlines where the brush texture can be appreciated. It can also work for social graphics and event promos, especially when paired with a clean sans for supporting copy.
The font reads as informal and human, with a lively, handmade energy. Its rough texture and brisk slant add a gritty, craft-forward tone that feels friendly rather than polished, suitable for designs that want personality and movement.
Designed to evoke quick hand-lettered brush writing in a compact, upright-leaning structure, balancing legibility with expressive texture. The goal appears to be a bold, attention-grabbing voice that feels handcrafted and energetic rather than refined.
Stroke texture is a defining feature at display sizes, while at smaller sizes the broken edges can visually thicken and reduce clarity in tight settings. Spacing appears naturally uneven in a hand-drawn way, which enhances authenticity but benefits from a bit of extra tracking in longer lines.