Distressed Leka 7 is a regular weight, wide, low contrast, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: posters, book covers, editorial, packaging, headlines, rugged, vintage, gritty, handmade, rustic, print patina, analog texture, vintage tone, rugged clarity, rough-edged, blotchy, inked, textured, press-printed.
A slab-serif, typewriter-inspired design with chunky proportions and a steady, upright stance. Strokes are low-contrast and generally heavy, but the contours are intentionally irregular: edges look worn and slightly wavy, with occasional ink-bleed bumps and rough interior corners that mimic distressed printing. Serifs are blunt and blocky rather than sharp, and terminals often appear flattened or smudged. Spacing and widths vary subtly from glyph to glyph, reinforcing an organic, imperfect rhythm while keeping a consistent baseline and readable silhouettes.
Well suited for posters, book covers, and editorial headlines where a rough, printed texture adds character. It also works for packaging, labels, and signage-style graphics that benefit from a vintage or utilitarian tone. For longer text, it performs best at moderate sizes where the distressing reads as texture rather than noise.
The font conveys a tactile, utilitarian mood—like text struck from an old ribbon or printed on rough paper. Its distressed texture reads as analog and workmanlike, giving copy a lived-in, slightly rebellious character suitable for atmospheric or narrative-driven design.
The design appears intended to recreate the feel of imperfect, analog reproduction—typewriter strike, letterpress wear, or aged stamp—while maintaining familiar slab-serif forms and straightforward readability. The controlled consistency suggests a crafted distress effect rather than purely random deformation.
The distressing is consistent across uppercase, lowercase, and numerals, with clear counters that remain open enough for legibility despite the roughness. The overall color is dark and assertive, making the texture especially visible at display sizes while still functioning for short paragraphs when set with comfortable leading.